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landowner
/ ˈlændˌəʊnə /
noun
- a person who owns land
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Derived Forms
- ˈlandˌownerˌship, noun
- ˈlandˌowning, nounadjective
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Other Words From
- landowner·ship noun
- landowning noun adjective
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Word History and Origins
Origin of landowner1
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Example Sentences
The third eaglet was never found despite a search by the Flint Creek volunteers and the landowner.
Patterson secured the permission of the landowner to venture onto the property.
The father and son treasure-hunting obsessives split the roughly $1.2 million in proceeds with the landowner.
In America,” de Tocqueville noted, “land costs little, and anyone can become a landowner.
The real Watson was a sociopathic landowner in southwest Florida where land and water know no fixed boundary.
For my own part, I see no difference now-a-days between the man who makes his money in business and the landowner.
When this occurs, the new land so formed is held to be the property of the farmer or landowner who has suffered loss.
Elias is eminent not only as an extensive landowner and cultivator, but as a statesman.
He might with equal probability have been an eccentric landowner or a gentlemanly ploughman.
Let there be no great landowner in the parish, and any combination on the part of the agriculturists becomes impossible.
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