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tenancy
noun
ten·an·cy
ˈte-nən(t)-sē
plural tenancies
1
: a holding of an estate or a mode of holding an estate
specifically
: the temporary possession or occupancy of something (such as a house) that belongs to another
2
: the period of a tenant's occupancy or possession
Examples of tenancy in a Sentence
He was granted tenancy of the farm.
During his tenancy, he tried to make as many improvements as he could.
Recent Examples on the Web
West Hollywood and Santa Monica regulated rent between tenancies.
—Andrew Khouri, Los Angeles Times, 17 Oct. 2024
California already has rent controls, but this would allow cities to pass extreme ones, including vacancy controls that forbid owners from raising rents between tenancies.
—Steven Greenhut, Orange County Register, 4 Oct. 2024
In California, ownership could be granted to a squatter who pays taxes on a property for five years through adverse possession and tenancy rights could be granted after 30 days.
—Ashlyn Messier, Fox News, 12 Oct. 2024
Common titling options are individual ownership, joint tenancy or ownership through a revocable living trust.
—Brian Niksa, Forbes, 9 Oct. 2024
See all Example Sentences for tenancy
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Word History
Etymology
ten(ant) entry 1 + -ancy (probably after Anglo-French tenaunce)
First Known Use
1590, in the meaning defined at sense 1
Dictionary Entries Near tenancy
Cite this Entry
“Tenancy.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/tenancy. Accessed 5 Nov. 2024.
Kids Definition
tenancy
noun
ten·an·cy
ˈten-ən-sē
plural tenancies
1
a
: the temporary possession or use of another's property
b
: the period of such use or possession
2
: the ownership of property
Legal Definition
tenancy
noun
ten·an·cy
ˈte-nən-sē
plural tenancies
1
: the holding of or a mode of holding an estate in property:
a
: a form of ownership of property : tenure
b
: the temporary possession or occupancy of property that belongs to another
—
holdover tenancy
: a tenancy that arises when one remains in possession of property after the expiration of the previous tenancy (as one under a lease), that may be established as a tenancy at will by the recognition of the landlord (as by accepting rent), and that may sometimes be statutorily converted to a periodic tenancy for the same or a different term than that of the original tenancy
liable for payment of rent in a holdover tenancy
called also tenancy at sufferance
—
joint tenancy
: a tenancy in which two or more parties hold equal and simultaneously created interests in the same property and in which title to the entire property is usually to remain with the survivors upon the death of one of the parties and so on to the last survivor
a right to sever the joint tenancy
see also tenancy by the entirety in this entry compare tenancy in common in this entry
—
life tenancy
: the tenancy of one with a life estate
—
periodic tenancy
\
ˌpir-ē-ˈä-dik-
\
: a tenancy that is carried forward by specified time periods (as months) without a lease and that may be terminated by the landlord or tenant after giving proper notice
—
tenancy at sufferance
: holdover tenancy in this entry
—
tenancy at will
: a tenancy that is terminable at the will of the landlord or tenant provided that applicable statutory requirements for notice are met
—
tenancy by the entirety
: a tenancy that is shared by spouses who are considered one person in law and have the right of survivorship and that becomes a tenancy in common in the event of divorce
property subject to a tenancy by the entirety cannot be encumbered by one tenant acting alone—Mays v. Brighton Bank, 832 S.W.2d 347 (1992)
called also tenancy by the entireties
compare estate by the entirety at estate sense 1
—
tenancy for years
: a tenancy that is for a specified period of time compare tenancy at will in this entry
—
tenancy in common
: a tenancy in which two or more parties share ownership of property but have no right to each other's interest (as upon the death of another tenant) compare joint tenancy in this entry
—
tenancy in partnership
: a tenancy that binds partners to the use of partnership property only for partnership purposes and that does not permit the separate assignment by a partner of his or her right to the property
2
: the period of a tenant's occupancy or possession
More from Merriam-Webster on tenancy
Thesaurus: All synonyms and antonyms for tenancy
Nglish: Translation of tenancy for Spanish Speakers
Britannica English: Translation of tenancy for Arabic Speakers
Britannica.com: Encyclopedia article about tenancy
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