livery
41livery stable keepers — Individuals who, as a regular course of business, provide quarters for the boarding of horses and rent them for hire. Dictionary from West s Encyclopedia of American Law. 2005. livery stable keepers …
42livery company — UK US noun [C] ► a trade association in the City of London, especially one with ancient origins ► (also livery service) a company that rents vehicles …
43livery pot — noun A flask in which an allowance of wine was formerly given to a servant • • • Main Entry: ↑livery …
44livery stable — livery ,stable noun count a place where owners pay to have their horses cared for or where horses can be rented …
45livery company — n. any of the London city companies that grew out of earlier trade guilds, characterized by distinctive ceremonial dress …
46livery stable — n. a stable where horses and carriages can be had for hire, or where horses are kept for a fixed charge …
47Livery Company — The Livery Companies are 108 trade associations in the City of London,[1] almost all of which are known as the Worshipful Company of the relevant trade, craft or profession. The medieval Companies originally developed as guilds and were… …
48Livery Company — Bei den Livery Companies handelt es sich um 108 [1] englische Wirtschaftsverbände innerhalb der City of London. Nahezu alle tragen die Bezeichnung „Worshipful Company of“, gefolgt von dem Namen ihrer jeweiligen Wirtschaftsparte oder ihres… …
49Livery collar — Sir Thomas More wearing the Collar of Esses, with the Tudor rose badge of Henry VIII, as Lord Chancellor, by Hans Holbein the Younger (1527). A livery collar or chain of office is a collar or heavy chain, usually of gold, worn as insignia of… …
50Livery yard — A livery yard is a British name for stables where the owners normally pay a weekly or monthly fee to keep their horses there. This may be referred to as boarding in the USA. A livery or boarding yard is not usually a riding school and the horses… …