English to Kannada Dictionary landholding

landholding

ಭೂಸ್ವಾಧೀನಕ್ಕೆ
definition
noun
Now aged 20 and worth an estimated $2.1 billion, his empire includes extensive landholdings , real estate, castles, works of art and business.
a piece of land owned or rented.
example
Rural aging will have implications for food security, patterns of 'landholding' , health services, labor markets, and so on.
This volume, with its focus on labor relations, 'landholding' , and the local, does not address at any length some other fundamental approaches to research on coffee production in the history of Latin America.
The Loch Katrine property is the largest single 'landholding' taken into Forestry Commission management for more than 30 years.
Contemporary patterns of 'landholding' in the Pacific Northwest reflect this legacy of land accumulation by a few large timber firms.
In patterns of 'landholding' , serf ownership, and use of property, Marrese also finds more similarities than differences between noblewomen and men.
Clear title to land was the crucial aspect of seventeenth century 'landholding' .
From the first decades of English settlement in the Plymouth and Massachusetts colonies to the end of the seventeenth century, norms of 'landholding' were established and then maintained by both the English and the Indians.
The Ulster Plantation was designed to reshape the political, economic and social landscape of Ulster, and, in many respects, it did just that, by changing irrevocably the pattern of settlement and 'landholding' in the province.
At the same time powerful landed nobles, on whom the tsar depended most immediately for social support and high state personnel, became increasingly resistant to political reform or changes in the patterns of 'landholding' .
The legislation included a prohibition of the sale of peasant land to non-peasants, and a maximum allowable 'landholding' : it was not intended to create a few big peasant landowners.
Early in the socialist period, the nationalization of industries, commerce, and most services, along with the forced collectivization of agrarian 'landholding' , brought about the end of private property.
Although we do not know the exact extent of any villa estates in Britain, several attempts have been made to reconstruct the sort of 'landholding' that the villa economy depended upon.
under the reform private 'landholding' was restricted
After the Norman Conquest the system of feudal 'landholding' required the lord of the manor to provide a court for his tenants.
The village was subsequently rebuilt mostly on the land, with complex repercussions for questions of intra-village 'landholding' .
Several of the chapters concentrate on 'landholding' , labor relations, and the family from the mid-nineteenth century up to the mid-twentieth.
Patterns of 'landholding' and inheritance varied between these units of land.
Finally, we consider the penal laws, which denied the Catholic Irish civil entitlements and placed severe restrictions on education and 'landholding' .
Her most satisfying accomplishment in this regard comes in the chapter on the ground rent strikes of the 1920s, which had a lasting effect in limiting the commercialization of urban 'landholding' .
In Chapter 10 we will tell you about the new form of 'landholding' , called commonhold, which is introduced by the Commonhold and Leasehold Reform Act 2002.
Patterns of 'landholding' (poor highlands in Catholic hands, fertile lowlands in Protestant), even down to the level of family farms, have been stable over generations.
Other institutional issues surrounding 'landholding' and land tenure must also be explored.
One local resident blamed environmental groups who have large 'landholdings' in the area for reducing livestock levels to encourage forest growth.
For Indian farmers with small 'landholdings' this is an encouraging move.
Since high spatial resolution satellite data is now available, we need not feel that small 'landholdings' are a disadvantage, but can be an advantage.
Take the popular action to take over the Dutch colonial plantation 'landholdings' , which started soon after the Japanese pushed the Dutch out in 1942.
Their density in some coastal areas reduced the size of 'landholdings' , cutting family income, but the availability of land limited the extent of overcrowding.
Only 70 percent of 'landholdings' or estates may be planted; the unplanted land has been set aside as a nature preserve.
A major function of the commune was to regulate relations inhering in economic independence, from dividing peasant 'landholdings' equitably to adjusting the rent they paid their owners.
Mind, it later emerged that the £30 bn sale of public assets would be heavily based on local government flogging off its various 'landholdings' - a potential nightmare if that includes precious playing fields.
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