appurtenant
adj.
pertinent, relevant
Appurtenance
Appurtenances (from late Latin appertinentia, from appertinere, "to appertain") is a
legal term for what belongs to and goes with something else, the accessories or things usually conjoined with the substantive matter in question.
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appurtenant
Adjective
1. relating to something that is added but is not essential; "an ancillary pump"; "an adjuvant discipline to forms of mysticism"; "The mind and emotions are auxilliary to each other"
(synonym) accessory, adjunct, ancillary, adjuvant, auxiliary, subsidiary
(similar) supportive
Appurtenant
(n.)
Something which belongs or appertains to another thing; an appurtenance.
(a.)
Annexed or pertaining to some more important thing; accessory; incident; as, a right of way appurtenant to land or buildings.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913), edited by Noah Porter.
About
Appurtenances, Appurtenant
APPURTENANCES - In common parlance and legal acceptation, is used to signify something belonging to another thing as principal, and which passes as incident to the principal thing. The word appurtenances, at least in a deed, will not pass any corporeal real property, but only incorporeal easements, or rights and privileges.
APPURTENANT - Belonging to; pertaining to of right.
This entry contains material from Bouvier's Legal Dictionary, a work published in the 1850's.