| 释义 | 
		Definition of tenurial in English: tenurialadjective tɛnˈjʊərɪəl Relating to the tenure of land. 关于土地保有权的 Example sentencesExamples -  The contexts of forest management have changed with new tenurial regimes, technologies, and new pressures for use.
 -  Devising a solution to Ireland's chaotic tenurial system was one of the major tasks faced by successive governments under the Union.
 -  Although there were some similarities with earlier Anglo-Saxon practice, it is difficult to deny that the tenurial revolution which followed the Norman Conquest witnessed the introduction of a new system of military obligation.
 -  With this de facto recognition of squatting, the word quickly came to mean simply that the tenurial status of the occupied land remained unresolved.
 -  Breaches of homage constituted felonies, and these could bring the tenurial relationship to an end.
 -  Legal and political criteria such as electorate rights and tenurial status were no longer reliable markers of socio-economic status.
 -  Leslie Gray and Michael Kevane also argue that soil building is linked to tenure building although, interestingly, they claim that tenurial status has little bearing on a farmer's choice to invest in soil quality.
 -  In northern Italy and in France, south of the Loire, the main tenurial development of the seventeenth century was a massive extension of share-cropping, whereby landlords received rents as a fixed percentage of their tenants' crops.
 -  In Barnes's words, ‘the soil was granted under the time-honored tenurial conditions of landholding in England.’
 -  Finally, do people evoke symbols of spiritual connection to the land in struggles to define tenurial rights, and to what extent does such connection lead to practices that support biodiversity?
 -  But, in Delhi, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Punjab, Jammu and Kashmir, and Uttar Pradesh, the tenurial laws specify inheritance rules that are highly gender unequal.
 -  Strictly speaking, these differed widely even within quite small regions: tenurial customs, after all, were legacies of the age before integrated markets.
 -  There is the problem of geographical diversity of tenurial forms and of terminology.
 
 
 Derivativesadverb  Silkby was probably always a hamlet which was economically, tenurially, and administratively dependent on its larger neighbour of Willoughby. Example sentencesExamples -  The phraseology suggests that Henley, although tenurially still linked with Benson, was increasingly seen as a distinct outlier with its own boundaries.
 -  Both Deanshanger and Puxley were ecclesiastically and tenurially dependent upon Passenham in 1086.
 -  In other words, as the absolute proprietors of land they made, tenurially a second permanent settlement with the lease-holders under more or less the same terms and conditions as their own settlement with the government.
 -  The holdings on the west bank of the Witham were tenurially distinct from the Richmond fee, and, indeed, the two halves of the town were not constituted as a single borough until Boston was incorporated in 1545.
 
 
 
 OriginLate 19th century: from medieval Latin tenura 'tenure' + -al. Rhymesmercurial, Muriel, seigneurial, Uriel     |