Estate
Look up estate in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
Estate or The Estate may refer to:
Law
- Estate (law), a term in common law for a person's property, entitlements and obligations
- Estates of the realm, a broad social category in the histories of certain countries.
- The Estates, representative bodies of the estates of the realm
- Estates General, a supra-regional gathering of representatives of the estates of the realm
- The Estates, representative bodies of the estates of the realm
- Estate in land
- Estate (land), the grounds and tenancies (such as farms, housing, woodland, parkland) associated with a very large property
- Housing estate, a group of houses built as a single development.
- Industrial estate (office park) and trading estate; property planned and sub-let for industrial and commercial use.
- Real estate or real property
- Estate agent or real estate agent
- Literary estate, the intellectual property of a deceased author, or the executor thereof
Automobiles and technology
- Estate car (station wagon), passenger car with a full-size interior cargo compartment
- Estate, a brand of major appliances, first from RCA, afterwards from Whirlpool Corporation
- Estate, Information Technology term for a set of computers and other technology infrastructure, generally the total set owned by a corporation, as in "Estate Management" See ITIL and other standards.
- In drugs, Estate is the name of Estradiol valerate & also for Aloxistatin.
Books
- The Estate (Isaac Bashevis Singer novel)
- The Estate play by Oladipo Agboluaje
Film and TV
- The Estate (TV series), BBC documentary
- The Estate, 2011 film directed by Steven Drew with Dave Courtney, Sean Brosnan (actor), Brian Murphy (actor)
Music
- Estate (album), a jazz piano album by Michel Petrucciani.
- "Estate" (song), a 1960 Italian song and jazz standard, sung by Milva, written by Brighetti, Bruno Martino
Other
- Estate Khmaladze (born 1944), Georgian statistician
gollark: Too bad.
gollark: Then they should use TLS, which has optimized code written for it and hardware acceleration for some primitives.
gollark: Also, it authenticates you by whether your message successfully decrypts with any of the keys, which sounds somewhat worrying.
gollark: No, it uses MD5 for hashing things.
gollark: The keys are MD5 hashes of the "API key" in use.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.