Ownership is the legal right to possess, use, and control something, such as property or an object, as one's own.
When an object or item of interest becomes your property.
Legal rights and responsibilities associated with an object in law refer to the ownership, use, and obligations related to that object. This includes the right to possess, transfer, and protect the object, as well as the responsibility to not misuse or harm others with it. These rights and responsibilities are defined by laws and regulations that govern property ownership and usage.
To possess something means to own or have control over it. Possession typically implies having physical custody or legal ownership of an object or property.
If a driver hits a fire hydrant on private property, then he or she is to blame. The hydrant is a stationary object that the driver should have been able to easily avoid. It is likely that, even with insurance, the driver will have to pay for any damages.
An object's size is a physical property of the object.
The object of conveyancing is to transfer legal ownership of property from one party to another through a legal process. The functions of conveyancing include conducting property searches, preparing legal documents such as contracts and deeds, facilitating the exchange of property funds, and registering the property transfer with the relevant authorities.
Not always ! If, say, you're walking down your local high-street, and you're captured on camera while walking past a live outside broadcast, you cannot object to them showing you on TV as you are in the 'public domain' If you were in your local pub, and a reporter burst in to do an 'expose' on the activities within the pub - you can object as it's private property. However - if you're recorded by CCTV on private premises you cannot object if the property owner has notices displayed warning you of the possibility of being filmed.
Ownership refers to the legal right to control and use a property or object. It involves having the title or deed to the item. Possession, on the other hand, simply means physically having the item in one's control without necessarily having legal ownership. Ownership gives the owner the right to make decisions about the item, while possession is just physical custody of it.
A physical possession is a tangible object that you own. Meaning that you actually own the object, can prove it and show it to others, as opposed to an idea or thought that you say is yours, but cannot claim ownership. IE: an invention that you do not own a patent on (this is considered intellectual property.)
Meaning someone own's something such as 'jacob own this pen' or using a apostrophes 'thats jacob's locker'.
Color is a property that can be observed without changing the object.