homeware.........warehouse
no,,,,,,but they can put a lien on it,,,and when you sell your house,,it has to pay the lien amount,,,before you get any money from the house.
The word "house" meaning "a building" is a noun. The word "house" meaning "to put in a house" is a verb.
Yes.
"an" always put "an" before a word starting with a vowel.
Generally, the comma should be placed before the word "otherwise" when used to introduce an alternative or contrast. For example: "I need to leave now, otherwise I will be late."
A house divided against itself cannot stand. Don't let the fox guard the henhouse. There wasn't a dry eye in the house. Put your house in order. Other common phrases include "a house of cards", "bring down the house", "clean house", "eat someone out of house and home", "the big house", "a plague on your house" and "a house is not a home".
no
I can only assume you are asking how can someone put a lien on a home in Canada? The owner of the home would have to owe you or the government a lot of money before you could put a lien on their home and even if it was a private affair I'm not 100% sure a private party can put a lien on someone's home. It's usually banks and or money owed to governments who put liens on a persons home.
You can put a house up for sale in foreclosure, but the foreclosure process could happen before the house sells. It doesn't make any sense, if you would like to sell the house, do so before foreclosure.
The letter "I" makes the word "I" and can be put before "attend" to make the sentence "I attend".
you need to put "an" before a word that starts with a vowelfor example an animal.
Upper.