Adverse
Adverse or adverse interest, in law, is anything that functions contrary to a party's interest. This word should not be confused with averse.
Adverse possession
In property law, adverse possession refers to an interest in real property which is contrary to the in-fact owner of the property. For example, an easement may permit some amount of access to property which might otherwise constitute a trespass.
gollark: Not that I'm some sort of engineered superhuman, but still.
gollark: I generally don't find myself running at anywhere near my maximum I/O data rate.
gollark: I have heard it said that Google and such aren't that efficiently run, but just have money-printers operating somewhere.
gollark: GPUs can go up to many tens of TFLOP/s but only have a few tens of gigabytes of memory, which is 3 OOM off.
gollark: It seems like our computers actually have a lot *less* memory than processing now.
See also
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Look up adverse in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
- Adverse inference
- Adverse party
- Adverse possession
- Adverse witness
Notes
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