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Bracken Hill Developments Ltd.

Address

Blackett House
Matfen
Northumberland
NE20 0RP



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Bracken Hill Developments Ltd. Details:

Construction And Development

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Information about words in this company name or address

bracken

1. bracken, Pteridium esculentum, fern
usage: fern of southeastern Asia; not hardy in cold temperate regions
2. bracken, pasture brake, brake, Pteridium aquilinum, fern
usage: large coarse fern often several feet high; essentially weed ferns; cosmopolitan
1. a large fern or brake, esp. Pteridium aquilinum.
2. a cluster or thicket of such ferns; an area overgrown with ferns and shrubs.
bracken or brake,common name for a tall fern with large triangular fronds, widespread throughout the world, often as a weed. It is considered poisonous to livestock when eaten in quantity, but the rootstocks and the young shoots, cooked, are used for food. Bracken is also a source of tannin and is used for thatching and as bedding for livestock. A beverage is made from the roots. The names bracken and brake are sometimes also applied to other large, coarse ferns and, as general terms, to a thicket of such plants. Bracken is classified in the division Polypodiophyta, class Polypodiopsida, order Filicales, family Polypodiaceae.

hill

A surname.

Submit Coat of Arms Hill Meaning: dweller at or near a hill that lay on rising ground; one who came from Hill, the name of several places in England.

1. a natural elevation of the earth''''''''s surface, smaller than a mountain.
2. an incline, esp. in a road: This old jalopy won''''''''t make it up the next hill.
3. an artificial heap, pile, or mound: a hill made by ants.
4. a small mound of earth raised about a cultivated plant or a cluster of such plants.
5. the plant or plants so surrounded: a hill of potatoes.
6. Baseball.mound1 .
7. go over the hill, Slang.
a. to break out of prison.
b. to absent oneself without leave from one''''''''s military unit.
c. to leave suddenly or mysteriously: Rumor has it that her husband has gone over the hill.
8. over the hill,
a. relatively advanced in age.
b. past one''''''''s prime.
9. the Hill.See Capitol Hill.
This distinguished surname, with over fifty entries in the "Dictionary of National Biography", and having no less than seventy-five Coats of Arms, is of Olde English pre 7th century derivation. It has two completely distinct possible origins. The first and most obvious being a topographical name from residence by or on a hill. The derivation is from the word "hyll", and requires no further explanation. These topographical surnames, which in their early forms were accompanied by a preposition such as ''''ate'''' or ''''del'''', were mong the earliest created, as natural and man-made features in the landscape provided easily recognisable distinguishing names in the small communities of the Middle Ages. Early examples of the name from this source include William Attehil of Cambridge in the 1260 Subsidy Rolls and Thomas del Hill of Yorkshire in the 1379 Poll Tax rolls. However recent research indicates that many name holders may derive from the medieval personal and baptismal name "Hille". This is a semi nickname or short form of one of the many Anglo-Saxon compound names with the first element "hild", meaning battle or war, such as Hildebrand and Hilliard or the French ''''hilaire'''' from the Latin ''''hilaris'''' meaning ''''cheerful''''. These are all surnames and personal names in their own right. One of the ''''first'''' of all Americans was Elizabeth Hill, recorded as born in ''''Elizabeth Cittie, Virginia'''' before 1620. The earliest coat of arms is that of Sir Robert Hill in the time of King Henry V1 in 1430 was silver, a black chevron between three water bouchets.

developments

1. the process of developing; growth; progress:
2. a significant consequence or event: recent developments in science.
3. a developed state or form: Drama reached its highest development in the plays of Shakespeare.
4. Music.the part of a movement or composition in which a theme or themes are developed.
5. a large group of private houses constructed as a unified community, esp. by a developer or government organization
Real estate development is a multifaceted business, encompassing activities that range from the renovation and re-lease of existing buildings to the purchase of raw land and the sale of improved parcels to others. Developers are the coordinators of the activities, converting ideas on paper into real property.

Real estate development is different from construction. Developer Louis Lesser drew the distinction in a 1963 New York Times article, "Developing is the key word. ''We don''t build ourselves'', Mr. Lesser stresses. ''We buy the land, finance the deal, and then we have the best builders build under bond at a fixed cost.''

Developers buy land, finance real estate deals, build or have builders build projects, create, imagine, control and orchestrate the process of development from the beginning to end. Developers usually take the greatest risk in the creation or renovation of real estate—and receive the greatest rewards. Typically, developers purchase a tract of land, determine the marketing of the property, develop the building program and design, obtain the necessary public approval and financing, build the structure, and lease, manage, and ultimately sell it. Developers work with many different counterparts along each step of this process, including architects, city planners, engineers, surveyors, inspectors, contractors, leasing agents and more. In the Town and Country Planning context of the UK, ''development'' is defined in the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 s55.