yes
No, very much not so. The land that you own is yours, as detailed in property plans kept by local government. The rest is public property, oned by the coolective and maintained by that same local government.
Generally, if you pay back property taxes on property you do not own you would be considered a volunteer. Your payments would not give you any ownership interest in that property.
A piece of physical property (land), such as a farm that is owned by an individual or group.
You can go to the tax assessor's office for your locale and the owner should be listed there. You might need to also obtain the legal description of the property before you go--should be similar to yours. Most times, the people in these offices are very helpful.
Real property is real estate is the feasible or physical property that you can see. It is also associated with physical structures, physical land, various resources, etc. It also includes a bundle of ownership and usage rights. Those things collectively called real property or real estate.
No. Anything either party owned before the marriage is considers separate property. The only way you maybe could get a portion of the land is if it was combined with marital property (i.e. a marital home was built on the land)
If its erected on your property it is your property. If it's on common land or adjacent to property owned by you, it doesn't become yours just because it has been standing for so many years.
The word physical is a noun and an adjective.The noun physical is a word for amedical examination to determine a person's bodily fitness.The adjective physical describes a noun asrelatingtoyour bodyratherthanyourmind;abletobeseen,touched,orfelt.The word property is a noun; a word forthings, especially valuable things, that are owned by someone; land and the buildings on it.The term 'physical property' is an adjective-noun combination, a term for property that has a physical form rather than an intellectual property such as an invention or a written work.
Tangible property refers to physical assets that can be touched or seen, such as vehicles or equipment. Tangible real property specifically pertains to physical assets related to real estate, such as land or buildings. In essence, tangible real property is a subset of tangible property, focusing on real estate assets.
To determine your property lines and get them marked accurately, you can start by checking your property deed for a legal description of the land. You can also hire a professional surveyor to conduct a survey of your land to accurately determine the boundaries. Once the survey is complete, the surveyor can mark the property lines with physical markers such as stakes or flags.
"property" is another word for possessions - usually physical possessions. "property" can also be used specifically when referring to real estate - buildings and land. "property" can also be used as a term denoting the characteristics of an something.