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person

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person

Legally, any natural or artificial person, which would include corporations, partnerships, associations, and limited liability companies. If it is important to distinguish among the “persons” who may do something or who are prohibited from doing something, relevant contracts, leases, or statutes will usually define the term.

The Complete Real Estate Encyclopedia by Denise L. Evans, JD & O. William Evans, JD. Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
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References in periodicals archive
Two of the introductions contained the first person pronoun in the third move.
Moreover, this very feature of a voice that does not unambiguously belong to Victor referring to Victor in the first person, perhaps more importantly than anything else, contributes to the effect of the uncanny and is deeply connected with the theme of the double that runs through the entire novel.
Secondly, why am I made uneasy by the foregrounding of the first person plural in Falk's phrase "Let us bless the source or flow of life"?
The First Person: An Essay on Reference and Intentionality.
First Person Plural by Lynn Hershman would seem at first glance to be a world apart from the historical project of History and Memory, to rethink the historiography of Japanese and Japanese-American internment.
In first person POV, the writer gets into the character's head.
Ms Alison Streeter, aged 34, last August became the first person to swim the 28 miles from the islands to Cornwall and was attempting to be the first complete the return journey.
Narrated in the first person, the story branches out to include several sub-plots involving the lives of criminals and also those of the squad members and their extended families.
Written in the first person, McGrath's novel is, in effect, Spider's diary--the place where he wrestles with a tangle of memories, fantasies, and immediate perceptions, working his way back to the traumatic childhood event that destroyed an already precarious hold on reality.
John Son covers a lot of emotional territory with his first person fiction, from early childhood cozy memories to the horror of the death of his mother.
Krak!, both highly praised novels about Haitian life, writes here for the new series of immigrant stories, First Person Fiction.
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