incorporeal
31incorporeal — in•cor•po•re•al [[t]ˌɪn kɔrˈpɔr i əl, ˈpoʊr [/t]] adj. 1) not corporeal or material; insubstantial 2) law having no material value but giving evidence of value, as a franchise • Etymology: 1525–35; < L incorpore(us)+ al I . See in III,… …
32incorporeal — /ɪnkɔˈpɔriəl/ (say inkaw pawreeuhl) adjective 1. not corporeal or material; spiritual. 2. relating to non material beings. 3. Law without material existence, but existing in the purview of the law, as a franchise. {Late Latin incorporeus + al1}… …
33incorporeal — /inkarporiyal/ Without body; not of material nature; the opposite of corporeal (q.v.) …
34incorporeal — /inkarporiyal/ Without body; not of material nature; the opposite of corporeal (q.v.) …
35incorporeal — Having no body or substance; intangible; without physical existence …
36incorporeal — adj. 1 not composed of matter. 2 of immaterial beings. 3 Law having no physical existence. Derivatives: incorporeality n. incorporeally adv. incorporeity n. Etymology: L incorporeus (as INCORPORATE) …
37incorporeal hereditaments — See hereditaments …
38incorporeal property — In the civil law, that which consists in legal right merely. The same as choses in action at common law …
39incorporeal rights — Rights to intangibles, such as legal actions, rather than rights to property (rights to possession or use of land) …
40incorporeal things — Things that have no body, but are comprehended by the understanding, such as rights of inheritance, servitudes, obligations, and right of intellectual property. Webb v. State Through Dept. of Transp. & Development, La.App. 1 Cir., 470 So.2d 994,… …