proprietorial Meaning & Definition

  • En [ prəˌpraɪəˈtɔː.ri.əl]
  • Us [ prəˌpraɪəˈtɔːr.i.əl]

Meaning of proprietorial In English

More Definitions of proprietorial

Examples of proprietorial

  • Not just stage works are subsumed in the index under a proprietorial name.

  • The proprietorial instinct could contribute to the existence of seats that were obstructive, or erected without proper permission, or too big.

  • He was aware, too, that proprietorial association with a successful and popular club could attract support from local working-class voters.

  • The system was 'entrepreneurship in all but title and proprietorial rights ' (p. 340).

  • Proprietorial rights, land ownership and boundary matters were never easy to determine.

  • For control of the breath is an assertion of proprietorial control over a body whose rhythms are no longer contingent on the clamour of the outside world.

  • People developed a proprietorial attitude to the sacrament, or displayed it on their home altars, but this was over-stepping the mark more than real disobedience, let alone heterodoxy.

  • Land-ownership created a proprietorial interest - cultural and economic - in the terrain as a scientific object,24 and normalized geological travelling as part of active, outdoor, riding culture.

More Examples of proprietorial

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May 10, 2021

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