① 物权单据 翻译成英文是什么
property documents (certificates,invoices, receipts, and so on)
② 请问中国官方对物权法的英文翻译是什么 对于各种法律能在哪些官网上找到 谢谢!
物权法官方英文表达:Real Right Law
法律查询网址:http://www.chnlaw.net/Index.htm,此外可网络搜索中国法律法规大全或查询之回类,除少答数是收费网站外,大多都提供免费查询。
③ 什么是物权法物权法的英文翻译是什么
《中华人民共和国物权法》是中华人民共和国实行社会主义制度以来,在中国大陆第一部专注明私有财产不属受侵犯的法律。
本法自1993年开始起草,1998年制定草案。2002年12月,九届全国人大常委会初审物权法,2005年7月向社会公布草案全文,其后又审议了六次,直到2007年3月16日十届全国人大五次会议上以2799票赞成、52票反对、37票弃权通过其草案。并将于同年10月1日起施行。
该法案明确对公有财产和私有财产给予平等保护:“国家、集体、私人的物权和其他权利人的物权受到法律保护,任何单位和个人不得侵犯。”
英文:Property Law of the People's Republic of China
④ 物权法用英文怎么说 要地道的说法
物权法 :
property law (the area of law that governs the various forms of ownership in real property)
⑤ 物权法 英语怎么说
都不对,就是Property Law
⑥ 物权法用英文怎么说要地道的说法
物权法_网络翻译
物权法
[词典] [法] jus rerum; law relating to rights over things;
[例句]文章利用比较法的资料,对物权法中异议登记版制度的相关规定权进行分析并提出完善意见。
This paper analyzes the related rules of dissenting registration system in the Property Law by the information of comparison.
⑦ 翻译成英语:提单是物权凭证
Bill of lading is the property certificate.
⑧ ★物权凭证英文怎么说
Documents of title to the goods
担保是外贸说法
⑨ 求助,物权凭证英语怎么说
document of title
英 [ˈdɔkjumənt ɔv ˈtaitl] 美 [ˈdɑkjəmənt ʌv ˈtaɪtl]
所有权状,所有权凭证
双语例句:
They shall apply when adopted by a contract of carriage which is not covered by a Bill of Lading or similar document of title, whether the contract be in writing or not.
本规则为运输合同采纳时方得适用,而不论该合同是否以书面订立,但该合同非由提单或类似的物权凭证所包括。
⑩ 物权法用英语怎么说
Property law
Property law is the area of law that governs the various forms of ownership in real property (land as distinct from personal or movable possessions) and in personal property, within the common law legal system. In the civil law system, there is a division between movable and immovable property. Movable property roughly corresponds to personal property, while immovable property corresponds to real estate or real property, and the associated rights and obligations thereon.
The concept, idea or philosophy of property underlies all property law. In some jurisdictions, historically all property was owned by the monarch and it devolved through feudal land tenure or other feudal systems of loyalty and fealty.
Though the Napoleonic code was among the first government acts of modern times to introce the notion of absolute ownership into statute, protection of personal property rights was present in more feudalist forms in the common law courts of medieval and early modern England.
Definition of property
One textbook on property law states:
When a layman is asked to define "property," he is likely to say that "property" is something tangible "owned" by a natural person (or persons), a corporation, or a unit of government. But such a response is inaccurate from a lawyer's viewpoint for at least two reasons: (1) it confuses "property" with the various subjects of "property," and (2) it fails to recognize that even the subjects of property may be intangible.
For a lawyer, "property" is not a "thing" at all, although "things" are the subject of property. Rather, as Jeremy Bentham asserted, property is a legally protected "expectation * * * of being able to draw such or such an advantage from the thing" in question [ . . . .][1]
Black's Law Dictionary (5th ed. 1979) states that "[i]n the strict legal sense, [property is] an aggregate of rights which are guaranteed and protected by the government" and that the term property "includes not only ownership and possession but also the right of use and enjoyment for lawful purposes."
By contrast, Barron's Law Dictionary (2d ed. 1984) defines property as "one's exclusive right to possess, use, and dispose of a thing" [ . . . ] "as well as the object, benefit, or prerogative which constitutes the subject matter of that right."
Property law can be divided into personal and real property. Real property concerns itself with rights in rem, or relating to land. Personal property concerns itself with rights in personam, or relating to chattels. Gray & Gray (1998) describe the definition of property in the modern sense as oscillating between 'competing models of property as a fact, property as a right, and property as a responsibility'[2] Declared ownership in and of itself is insufficient to constitute property in a legal sense. Rather, the notion of property arises where one can have his/her right to land or chattels respected and enforced by a court of law. Therefore to possess good title (and thus enforceable rights) on property one must acquire it legitimately, according to the laws of the jurisdiction in which one seeks enforcement.