Word Meanings - WADSET - Book Publishers vocabulary database
A kind of pledge or mortgage.
Related words: (words related to WADSET)
- PLEDGERY
A pledging; suretyship. - PLEDGE
The transfer of possession of personal property from a debtor to a creditor as security for a debt or engagement; also, the contract created between the debtor and creditor by a thing being so delivered or deposited, forming a species of bailment; - MORTGAGEE
The person to whom property is mortgaged, or to whom a mortgage is made or given. - MORTGAGER
gives a mortgage. - PLEDGEOR; PLEDGOR
One who pledges, or delivers anything in pledge; a pledger; -- opposed to Ant: pledgee. Note: This word analogically requires the e after g, but the spelling pledgor is perhaps commoner. - PLEDGELESS
Having no pledge. - MORTGAGEOR; MORTGAGOR
One who gives a mortgage. Note: The letter e is required analogically after the second g in order to soften it; but the spelling mortgagor is in fact the prevailing form. When the word is contradistinguished from mortgagee it is accented on the - PLEDGER
One who pledges. - PLEDGEE
The one to whom a pledge is given, or to whom property pledged is delivered. - PLEDGET
A string of oakum used in calking. (more info) 1. A small plug. - MORTGAGE
A conveyance of property, upon condition, as security for the payment of a debt or the preformance of a duty, and to become void upon payment or performance according to the stipulated terms; also, the written instrument by which the conveyance - INTERPLEDGE
To pledge mutually. - SAFE-PLEDGE
A surety for the appearance of a person at a given time. Bracton. - IMPLEDGE
To pledge. Sir W. Scott. - DISMORTGAGE
To redeem from mortgage. Howell. - BLANKET MORTGAGE; BLANKET POLICY
One that covers a group or class of things or properties instead of one or more things mentioned individually, as where a mortgage secures various debts as a group, or subjects a group or class of different pieces of property to one general lien. - FRANKPLEDGE
A pledge or surety for the good behavior of freemen, -- each freeman who was a member of an ancient decennary, tithing, or friborg, in England, being a pledge for the good conduct of the others, for the preservation of the public peace; a free