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Domicile
Domicile From domus, Latin for "house." The state where an individual has his or her true, fixed permanent home and principal business establishment and where that person has the intention of returning whenever he or she is absent from it.
RELATED TERMS--------------------------------------
Fixed A time period that is fixed for each calendar year, either by date or by calendar weeks; most in numerical sequence 1-52.
Principal 1) The outstanding balance of a loan. 2) A party to a real estate transaction. 3) The head of a real estate firm.
SIMILAR TERMS--------------------------------------
Dominant tenement The estate that is said to attach to and derive benefit from the servient estate in reference to an easement appurtenant.
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Documentary stamps A State tax, in the forms of stamps, required on deeds and mortgages when real estate title passes from one owner to another.
Documentary tax stamps Stamps affixed to a deed showing the amount of transfer tax.
Documentary transfer tax Tax applicable to property transfers and affixed to the grant deed; varies from county to county, city to city.
Dollar stop An agreed dollar amount of taxes and operating expense each tenant will pay on a prorated basis
Domed ceiling A hemispherical ceiling that projects upward without support.
Domicile
Dominant tenement The estate that is said to attach to and derive benefit from the servient estate in reference to an easement appurtenant.
Dormer A window set upright in a sloping roof.
Double taxation One of the main disadvantages of corporate ownership of income property is that the profits are subject to double taxation.
Double-hung window A window that consists of two sashes that slide up and down.
Dovetail joints Joints that lock two pieces of wood together with meshed teeth.
This dictionary contains 6433 terms. |
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