G & S Properties (middlesbrough) Ltd.
Address
9 Charles StreetNew Marske
Teeside
TS11 8EZ
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G & S Properties (middlesbrough) Ltd. Details:
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Information about words in this company name or address
g
The letter G was introduced in the Old Latin period as a variant of ‹c› to distinguish voiced /ɡ/ from voiceless /k/. The recorded originator of ‹g› is freedman Spurius Carvilius Ruga, the first Roman to open a fee-paying school, who taught around 230 BC. At this time ‹k› had fallen out of favor, and ‹c›, which had formerly represented both /ɡ/ and /k/ before open vowels, had come to express /k/ in all environments.
Ruga''s positioning of ‹g› shows that alphabetic order, related to the letters'' values as Greek numerals, was a concern even in the 3rd century BC. Sampson suggests that: "Evidently the order of the alphabet was felt to be such a concrete thing that a new letter could be added in the middle only if a ''space'' was created by the dropping of an old letter." According to some records, the original seventh letter, ‹z›, had been purged from the Latin alphabet somewhat earlier in the 3rd century BC by the Roman censor Appius Claudius, who found it distasteful and foreign.
Eventually, both velar consonants /k/ and /ɡ/ developed palatalized allophones before front vowels, leading to the situation today''s Romance languages where, ‹c› and ‹g› have different sound values depending on context. Because of French influence, English also has this feature in its orthography.
s
1. the 19th letter of the English alphabet, a consonant.
2. any spoken sound represented by the letter S or s, as in saw, sense, or goose.
3. something having the shape of an S.
4. a written or printed representation of the letter S or s.
5. a device, as a printer''s type, for reproducing the letter S or s.
an ending marking nouns as plural , occurring also on nouns that have no singular , or on nouns that have a singular with a different meaning . The pluralizing value of -s 3 is weakened or lost in a number of nouns that now often take singular agreement, as the names of games and of diseases ; the latter use has been extended to create informal names for a variety of involuntary conditions, physical or mental . A parallel set of formations, where -s 3 has no plural value, are adjectives denoting socially unacceptable or inconvenient states ; cf. -ers. Also,-es.
properties
1. the possession or possessions of a particular owner: They lost all their property
2. goods, land, etc., considered as possessions: The corporation is a means for the common ownership of property.
3. a piece of land or real estate: property or properties on Main Street.
4. ownership; right of possession, enjoyment, or disposal of anything, esp. of something tangible: to have property in land.
Modern property rights are based on conceptions of owners and possession as belonging to legal persons, even if the legal person is not a natural person. In most countries, corporations, for example, have legal rights similar to those of citizens. Therefore, the corporation is a juristic person or artificial legal entity, under a concept that some refer to as "corporate personhood".
Property rights are protected in the current laws of most states, usually in their constitution or in a bill of rights. Protection is also prescribed in the United Nations'' Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Article 17, and in the European Convention on Human Rights , Protocol 1.
Traditional principles of property rights include:
control of the use of the property
the right to any benefit from the property
a right to transfer or sell the property
a right to exclude others from the property

