Legally, the above definition fits the term "slave". That is, a person who is the property of another is a slave.
If you are speaking about emotional or other non-legal "belonging", there is a whole lexicon of various terms, which depend entirely on the exact situation and relationship between the two persons.
When it belongs to another person
It's the individual's own name.
The apostrophe s ('s) indicates possession, meaning something in the sentence belongs to the person.For example: One person's trash is another person's treasure.
Their soul belongs to God and themself. You can pray for the person though and try to lead them to god through Christ so they can be saved.
If person A owns something and gives it to person B, then it belongs to person B. If person A didn't own it in the first place, then it belongs to whomever did own it before A stole it.
What constitutes a crime varies from country to country, so the answer can only be very general. Most people considered criminals have done something to hurt another person, taken something that belongs to another person, or violated another person's rights or property.
Answer: A person cannot make an adverse claim on property if they had the owner's permission to occupy it. The nature of your use of the property would need to be ascertained.
It is a feature that belongs to, or represents a person or thing
It varies.....they may belongs to from OBC to higher caste like Kayastha(Second to Brahmin).It will be better to determine from person to person perspective.
No. A person cannot encumber property they don't own.
another word for the qualities of a person is the traits of a person or the vitues of a person
A freehold lease may refer to the lease of land that belongs to another person. Your question is confusing because a freehold estate is the right to the use and possession of land for an indefinite period and a leasehold estate is a lease of land that belongs to another.