Nuisancenoun
A minor annoyance or inconvenience.
Nuisancenoun
A person or thing causing annoyance or inconvenience.
Nuisancenoun
(legal) Anything harmful or offensive to the community or to a member of it, for which a legal remedy exists.
Nuisancenoun
That which annoys or gives trouble and vexation; that which is offensive or noxious.
Nuisancenoun
(law) a broad legal concept including anything that disturbs the reasonable use of your property or endangers life and health or is offensive
Nuisancenoun
a bothersome annoying person;
Nuisancenoun
a person or thing causing inconvenience or annoyance
Nuisancenoun
an act which is harmful or offensive to the public or a member of it and for which there is a legal remedy.
Nuisance
Nuisance (from archaic nocence, through Fr. noisance, nuisance, from Lat.
Trespassnoun
sin
Trespassnoun
(legal) Any of various torts involving interference to another's enjoyment of his property, especially the act of being present on another's land without lawful excuse.
Trespassverb
To commit an offence; to sin.
Trespassverb
To offend against, to wrong (someone).
Trespassverb
(intransitive) To go too far; to put someone to inconvenience by demand or importunity; to intrude.
Trespassverb
(legal) To enter someone else's property illegally.
Trespassverb
(obsolete) To pass beyond a limit or boundary; hence, to depart; to go.
Trespassverb
To decree that a person shall be arrested for trespassing if he or she returns to someone else's land.
Trespassverb
To pass beyond a limit or boundary; hence, to depart; to go.
Trespassverb
To commit a trespass; esp., to enter unlawfully upon the land of another.
Trespassverb
To go too far; to put any one to inconvenience by demand or importunity; to intrude; as, to trespass upon the time or patience of another.
Trespassverb
To commit any offense, or to do any act that injures or annoys another; to violate any rule of rectitude, to the injury of another; hence, in a moral sense, to transgress voluntarily any divine law or command; to violate any known rule of duty; to sin; - often followed by against.
Trespassnoun
Any injury or offence done to another.
Trespassnoun
Any voluntary transgression of the moral law; any violation of a known rule of duty; sin.
Trespassnoun
An unlawful act committed with force and violence (vi et armis) on the person, property, or relative rights of another.
Trespassnoun
a wrongful interference with the possession of property (personal property as well as realty), or the action instituted to recover damages
Trespassnoun
entry to another's property without right or permission
Trespassverb
enter unlawfully on someone's property;
Trespassverb
make excessive use of;
Trespassverb
break the law
Trespassverb
commit a sin; violate a law of God or a moral law
Trespassverb
pass beyond (limits or boundaries)
Trespassverb
enter someone's land or property without permission
Trespassverb
make unfair claims on or take advantage of (something)
Trespassverb
commit an offence against (a person or a set of rules)
Trespassnoun
entry to a person's land or property without permission
Trespassnoun
a sin or offence
Trespass
Trespass is an area of criminal law or tort law broadly divided into three groups: trespass to the person, trespass to chattels, and trespass to land. Trespass to the person historically involved six separate trespasses: threats, assault, battery, wounding, mayhem (or maiming), and false imprisonment.