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royalty

Did you mean: royalty, Royalty (TX), Royalties, Royalty (family name), The Royalty, Daihinmin, Royalty (performed by Gang Starr), Royalty (performed by Byron Cage), premium, On Royalty

 
Dictionary: roy·al·ty   (roi'əl-tē) pronunciation
 
n., pl. -ties.
    1. A person of royal rank or lineage.
    2. Monarchs and their families considered as a group.
  1. The lineage or rank of a monarch.
  2. The power, status, or authority of a monarch.
  3. Royal quality or bearing.
  4. A kingdom or possession ruled by a monarch.
  5. A right or prerogative of the crown, as that of receiving a percentage of the proceeds from mines in the royal domain.
    1. The granting of a right by a monarch to a corporation or an individual to exploit specified natural resources.
    2. The payment for such a right.
    1. A share paid to a writer or composer out of the proceeds resulting from the sale or performance of his or her work.
    2. A share in the proceeds paid to an inventor or a proprietor for the right to use his or her invention or services.
  6. A share of the profit or product reserved by the grantor, especially of an oil or mining lease. Also called override.

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A payment to an owner for the use of property, especially patents, copyrighted works, franchises or natural resources.

Investopedia Says:
Royalties are usually expressed as a percentage of the revenues obtained through the use of the owner's property.

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Payment to the holder for the right to use property such as a patent, copyrighted material, or natural resources. For instance, inventors may be paid royalties when their inventions are produced and marketed. Authors may get royalties when books they have written are sold. Land owners leasing their property to an oil or mining company may receive royalties based on the amount of oil or minerals extracted from their land. Royalties are set in advance as a percentage of income arising from the commercialization of the owner's rights or property.

 

Money paid to a property owner for extraction of some valuable resource from the land.
Example: Richman owns a 500-acre ranch in west Texas. An oil company negotiates a Lease with Richman to explore for oil on the ranch. Under the agreement, Richman will receive a royalty based on the price of oil and the number of barrels of oil pumped from the ranch.

 
Law Encyclopedia: Royalty
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This entry contains information applicable to United States law only.

Compensation for the use of property, usually copyrighted works, patented inventions, or natural resources, expressed as a percentage of receipts from using the property or as a payment for each unit produced.

When a person creates a book, song, play, or painting, the work is considered intellectual property. Similarly, when an inventor receives a patent on his invention, the inventor has intellectual property rights in the thing created. Typically, authors, songwriters, composers, playwrights, and inventors do not have the financial ability to fully exploit the commercial use of their creations. They must turn to businesses that specialize in the marketing of intellectual property. When a business obtains the right to market the creation, the creator usually receives compensation in the form of a royalty.

A royalty agreement is part of the contract that the creator of the work negotiates with the business that seeks to exploit the creation. A royalty can be as simple as a fixed amount of money for each copy of a book or compact disc sold by the business. For example, a novelist agrees to let a publisher publish her new book. For granting the publisher the rights to the book, the novelist will receive $3 for each copy sold. If the novelist is a best-selling author, the publisher may agree to a higher royalty rate. Book and music publishers sometimes give an advance against royalties to an author or musician when the contract is signed. For example, the novelist might receive $5,000 as an advance against her royalties. In this case the publisher will keep the first $5,000 of the royalties to cover the cash advance. Typically, if the book failed to produce enough royalties to cover the advance, the publisher would write off the difference as a loss. However, a publisher might sue an author to recover an advance if the author never produces a publishable manuscript.

A playwright's royalty may be based on a percentage of the box office receipts from each performance of the play. An inventor's royalty might be an amount per unit sold or a percentage of the profits generated by the invention. In some cases it might be both. Because a royalty is one of the terms negotiated in a contract, the type and amount will depend on the bargaining power of the parties.

Under the law royalties are personal property. When a person dies, the heirs receive the royalties. For example, when Elvis Presley died, his estate went to his daughter Lisa Marie, who now collects the royalties from the music company that sells her father's recordings.

Royalty agreements are also used in the mineral and gas industries. These agreements have much in common with the origin of the term. For many centuries in Great Britain, the Crown owned all the gold and silver mines. A private business could mine these "royal" metals only if it made a payment, a royalty, to the Crown.

When, for example, a petroleum company wants to drill for oil on a person's land, the company negotiates a royalty agreement with the owner of the mineral rights. If the company strikes oil, the owner of the mineral rights will receive a royalty based on a percentage of the barrels pumped out of the wells. The owner may receive the royalty in kind (the actual oil) or in value (the dollar amount agreed to in the contract), based on the total production from the property.

The schedule for royalty payments is specified in the contract. Quarterly or annual payments are typical. The royalty owner has the right to make an independent accounting of the business records to ensure that the figures upon which the royalty is based are accurate.

See: Copyright; Entertainment Law; Literary Property; Mine and Mineral Law; Music Publishing; Patents; Publishing Law.

 

Created from the varieties Trousseau and Alicante Ganzin, this hybrid is a red grape that yields red juice (instead of white). It's used mainly to add color to blends. Royalty was developed by the university of california, davis and released in 1958. It's grown primarily in California's central valley although its acreage is declining owing to lack of popularity.

 
Economics Dictionary: royalty
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A payment made for some right or privilege, as when a publisher pays a royalty to an author for the author's granting the publisher the right to sell the author's book.

 
Quotes About: Royalty
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Quotes:

"We treat our people like royalty. If you honor and serve the people who work for you, they will honor and serve you." - Mary Kay Ash

"A family on the throne is an interesting idea. It brings down the pride of sovereignty to the level of petty life." - Walter Bagehot

"The Sovereign has, under a constitutional monarchy such as ours, three rights -- the right to be consulted, the right to encourage, the right to warn. And a king of great sense and sagacity would want no others." - Walter Bagehot

"The best reason why Monarchy is a strong government is, that it is an intelligible government. The mass of mankind understand it, and they hardly anywhere in the world understand any other." - Walter Bagehot

"Royalty is a government in which the attention of the nation is concentrated on one person doing interesting actions." - Walter Bagehot

"A throne is only a bench covered with velvet." - Napoleon Bonaparte

See more famous quotes about Royalty

 
Translations: Royalty
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Dansk (Danish)
n. - kongelige personer, de kongelige, licensafgift, patentafgift, forfatterhonorar

Nederlands (Dutch)
het koningshuis, koninklijkheid, koningschap

Français (French)
n. - membre d'une famille royale, membres d'une famille royale, royauté, droits d'auteur, redevance, royalties

Deutsch (German)
n. - Mitglied des Königshauses, Tantieme

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - βασιλικό αξίωμα, βασιλική οικογένεια, (πληθ.) συγγραφικά ή πνευματικά δικαιώματα, δικαιώματα εφευρέτη

Italiano (Italian)
dignitý reale, diritti di autore

Português (Portuguese)
n. - realeza (f), majestade (f)

Русский (Russian)
член королевской семьи, авторские отчисления

Español (Spanish)
n. - realeza, familia real, regalías, derechos de autor o de inventor

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - kunglighet, royalty

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
皇室, 王权, 技术使用费

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 皇室, 王權, 技術使用費

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 왕위, 왕의 것, 왕족의 한 사람, 존엄

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 特許権使用料, 著作権料, 印税, 王位, 王権, 王族, 王の尊厳

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) ملكيه, ضريبه, مبلغ من المال يدفع إلى مؤلف أو مخترع إو صاحب حق مقابل إستعمال هذا الحق‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮מלכות, תמלוג, משפחת המלוכה, זכות, במיוחד על מחצבים, שמעניק שליט לאדם או לחברה, תשלום של מפיק נפט, גז כו' לבעל הקרקע‬


 
Best of the Web: royalty
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American Sign Language
commtechlab.msu.edu
 
 
 

Did you mean: royalty, Royalty (TX), Royalties, Royalty (family name), The Royalty, Daihinmin, Royalty (performed by Gang Starr), Royalty (performed by Byron Cage), premium, On Royalty


 

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Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
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Economics Dictionary. The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition Edited by E.D. Hirsch, Jr., Joseph F. Kett, and James Trefil. Copyright © 2002 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin. All rights reserved.  Read more
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