different between allodium vs allod
allodium
English
Alternative forms
- alod
- allod
Etymology
From Medieval Latin allodium, from Frankish *allaud (“allodium, patrimony”, literally “entire property”). Cognate with Old High German ?t (“property”), Old Saxon ?d (“estate, wealth”), Old English ?ad (“possessions”).
Noun
allodium (plural allodiums or allodia)
- (dated) freehold land or property
Related terms
- allodial
Translations
allodium From the web:
- what does allodium
- what is allodial land
allod
English
Alternative forms
- alod
Noun
allod (plural allods)
- allodium
Anagrams
- aldol, do-all
allod From the web:
- what allodynia means
- what's allodial system
- what allowed means
- allodynia what causes it
- allodynia what to do
- allodoxaphobia what does it mean
- allodial meaning
- what is allodial title
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- allodium vs allod
- crossfade vs crossfaded
- crossfaded vs crossfades
- crossfades vs crossfader
- crossfader vs fader
- crossfaders vs crossfades
- track vs crossfade
- audio vs crossfade
- volume vs crossfade
- fade vs crossfade
- clothing vs upholstery
- drapery vs upholstery
- slipcovers vs upholstery
- carpentry vs upholstery
- upholstery vs reupholstery
- upholsters vs upholstery
- upholstery vs cladding
- exploratative vs exploration
- exploited vs exploiting
- exploited vs extracted