Alienage
the state of being an .
the legal status of an .
historical examples
you are ready enough to inflict on the irish roman catholic all the evils of alienage.
the miscellaneous writings and speeches of lord macaulay, vol. 4 (of 4) thomas babington macaulay
the laws of alienage cannot apply to an artificial person, because it can have no country.
abridgement of the debates of congress, from 1789 to 1856 (4 of 16 vol.) various
the sky, the crater, the black shadows etched against the blacker night bespoke the alienage of the universe.
first on the moon jeff sutton
their rewards are from a foreign public—their fame, we fear, will suffer from alienage.
thomas davis, selections from his prose and poetry thomas davis
to make alien subscribers capable of holding lands; and so far, is against the laws of alienage.
memoir, correspondence, and miscellanies, from the papers of thomas jefferson thomas jefferson
such declaration of alienage creates ipso facto the loss of nationality.
international law. a treatise. volume i (of 2) l-ssa francis oppenheim
but the one privilege, the one advantage of alienage, you deny him.
the miscellaneous writings and speeches of lord macaulay, vol. 4 (of 4) thomas babington macaulay
Read Also:
- Alienation of affections
the estrangement by a third person of one spouse from the other.
- Alienative
the act of , or of causing someone to become indifferent or hostile: the advocacy group fights against prejudice and social alienation of immigrants. the state of being , withdrawn, or isolated from the objective world, as through indifference or disaffection: the group’s alienation from mainstream society. the act of turning away, transferring, or diverting: […]
- Alienee
a person to whom property is alienated. historical examples the purchaser or alienee brought an action against the tenant-in-tail, alleging that he had no legal t-tle to the land. encyclopaedia britannica, 11th edition, volume 10, slice 3 various nor was the alienee, doubtless, to be taxed without his own consent, any more than another tenant […]
- Aliener
a person who transfers property. noun (law) a person who transfers property to another
- Alieni generis
of another kind.