The demise of the company was sudden and unexpected.
2 property that you rent or give to someone for a particular number of years, or a legal agreement in which you rent or give this property:
3 to rent or give property to someone for a particular number of years:
After all, enfranchisement can take place only where the property has already been demised by way of a long lease.
Several bishops are visitors, and there might be vacancies owing to demises.
I think all royalty owners, whatever their post-1912 demises may say, however they may be expressed, are well justified in expressing the same preference.
In most statutes a low rent is an annual rent of less than two-thirds of the rateable value of the property demised by the lease.
I would say, therefore, that it covers any payment of a recurring nature given in consideration of the occupation of the premises demised by the tenant.
Demise's body repairs itself so perfectly that he can even return from death.
As such, the demise of employment provides a clear rationale for supporting the development of self-help.
After 1660, for all the return of monarchical forms, no more than political contest did aesthetic contest suffer a demise.