different between stallage vs tallage

stallage

English

Etymology

stall +? -age? Compare Old French estallange, of German origin.

Noun

stallage (countable and uncountable, plural stallages)

  1. (obsolete) The erection and use of a stall at a fair or market.
  2. (obsolete) The dues levied for the erection and use of a stall at a fair or market.
    • 1899, Joseph Gerald Pease and Herbert Chitty, A treatise on the law of markets and fairs with the principal statutes relating thereto, Knight and Co., pg. 63:
      Stallage and the like payments are made in respect of some user of the soil beyond the mere entry into the market; for no one has a right to erect a stall or appropriate part of the market place as a standing without making a satisfaction for it to the owner of the soil []
  3. (obsolete) dung of cattle or horses, mixed with straw

Anagrams

  • Steagall, gallates, tallages

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tallage

English

Etymology

From French taillage, from tailler (to cut).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?tæl?d??/

Noun

tallage (countable and uncountable, plural tallages)

  1. An impost.
  2. (Britain, law, obsolete or historical) A certain rate or tax paid by barons, knights, and inferior tenants toward the public expenses.

Alternative forms

  • talliage, tailage, taillage

Translations

Verb

tallage (third-person singular simple present tallages, present participle tallaging, simple past and past participle tallaged)

  1. To lay an impost upon.
  2. To cause to pay tallage.

Derived terms

  • tallageable

Anagrams

  • Latgale, gallate

tallage From the web:

  • what does tillage mean
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