curtilage — cur·ti·lage / kərt əl ij/ n [Anglo French curtillage enclosed land belonging to a house, kitchen garden, from Old French cortillage kitchen garden, from cortil garden, ultimately from Latin cohort cohors farmyard]: the area surrounding and… … Law dictionary
curtilage — (n.) early 14c., from Anglo Fr. curtilage, from O.Fr. cortil little court, walled garden, yard, from M.L. cortile court, yard, from L. cortis (see COURT (Cf. court)) … Etymology dictionary
Curtilage — Cur ti*lage (k?r t? l?j), n. [OF. cortillage, curtillage, fr. cortil court, courtyard, LL. cortis court. See {Court}.] (Law) A yard, courtyard, or piece of ground, included within the fence surrounding a dwelling house. Burrill. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
curtilage — [kʉrt′ l ij΄] n. [ME < OFr cortillage < cortil, dim. < LL cortis, COURT] Law the fenced in ground and buildings immediately surrounding a house or dwelling … English World dictionary
Curtilage — The curtilage is an important legal term to define the land immediately surrounding a house or dwelling, including any closely associated buildings and structures, but excluding any associated open fields beyond . It defines the boundary within… … Wikipedia
curtilage — n. an area attached to a dwelling house and forming one enclosure with it. Etymology: ME f. AF curtilage, OF co(u)rtillage f. co(u)rtil small court f. cort COURT … Useful english dictionary
curtilage — /kerr tl ij/, n. Law. the area of land occupied by a dwelling and its yard and outbuildings, actually enclosed or considered as enclosed. [1250 1300; ME courtelage < AF; OF cortillage, equiv. to cortil yard (cort COURT + il dim. suffix) + age… … Universalium
curtilage — noun /ˈkɜːtɪlɪdʒ,ˈkɝtəlɪdʒ/ the area immediately surrounding a house. Contains either no roof, or areas within the roof to see inside. Syn: grounds … Wiktionary
curtilage — n. enclosed area, confined area … English contemporary dictionary
curtilage — [ kə:t(ɪ)lɪdʒ] noun an area of land attached to a house and forming one enclosure with it. Origin ME: from Anglo Norman Fr., var. of OFr. courtillage, from courtil small court , from cort court … English new terms dictionary