No.
Yes it was. it was made up of the colonists who lived there and owned a piece of land.
I'm not sure if he had a house but he was very nomadic. He mostly lived Florence, so you would think he owned. But again, not sure.
Yes. It does that all the time....ask anyone that has owned a house in New England.
Tom Clancy lived in Baltimore, Maryland, but owned a house in Destin, Florida.
The complete predicate is "owned a house" and the verb is "owned."
A peasant typically lived in a small house or cottage on land owned by a lord or noble. The house was often simple and made of local materials such as wood or mud. The living conditions were basic, with few amenities and limited space.
Knights often lived in their own mansions or homes on the land they owned, when they weren't lodging with their king or superior lord.
At least three. He owned New Place, a large house in Stratford. He also owned a house in Blackfriars, London, near the Blackfriars Theatre which at the time of his death was leased out, and his father's house in Henley Street, where his sister lived after the death of her husband. Shakespeare also owned a number of other properties as related in his will, but these would appear to be agricultural properties.
The landlord at The House on Mango Street was named Edna, but she was informally known as "Edna who belongs to Joe." She was a kind but strict woman who owned the house where the protagonist, Esperanza, lived.
The first $250,000 of capital gains is not taxable if 1) You lived in the house for any two of the five years before you sold it. -AND- 2) You owned the house for any two of the five years before you sold it. -AND- 3) You have not claimed the exclusion on another house during the previous two years. The exclusion jumps to $500,000 if 1) You are married filing jointly -AND- 2) Your spouse also lived in the house for two of the previous five years. Financing or refinancing makes absolutely no difference. Forget about refinancing. As long as you lived in and owned the house for two of the previous five years, you are entitled to an exclusion. If you owned the house for those four years you lived in it, you have no problem. If you are saying that you lived in a house for four years, but bought it less than two years ago, then you don't qualify for the exclusion unless you meet one of the exceptions for moving due to circumstances beyond your control.
At the top you had the Gentlemen and Gentry, who were rich and owned huge plots of land in the countryside. Then there were Citizens, who lived in the city, but had nice houses and owned servants. Yeomen were next, they had to work, but still lived in reasonable comfort. Last were the Labourers, who were very poor, and had to work to earn a living.
Look at the laws of your state as to survivor benefits and was there a will?