In the highest and best use analysis, maximum productivity is usually considered best use of the property.
Property is generally divided into tangible property and intangible property. Physical properties are visible, tangible, non-physical properties. Furthermore, tangible ownership is ownership over material things, and intangible ownership is intangible rights over things.
For example, gold bars are assets and property. However, while used pillows are considered property, they are not assets unless they are used to generate revenue for a business such as a hotel.
Ownership defines the theoretical and legal ownership of resources and how they are used.
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Answer: (B) Hypothesizes
Explanation:
The hypothesis is basically refers to the tentative statement that explain about the different types of ideas and also the explanation of the given given study or the any type of experiment.
The hypothesizes helps explain about the different types of relationship between the two given variables and it is also known as the well establish concept or theory.
According to the given question, the Roberto is living near the wind farms and he is explain all the hypothesizes about the working of the turbine.
Therefore, Option (B) is correct answer.
There is no timeline so i'm just gonna slide in here for some points thx ^-^
Royal governors wanted to keep settlers happy. So instead of staying in England they went all the way to the colony to live there with the settlers and learn their way of life. This would help them make better decisions.
Tobacco in Colonial Virginia
Contributed by Emily Jones Salmon and John Salmon
Tobacco was colonial Virginia's most successful cash crop. The tobacco that the first English settlers encountered in Virginia—the Virginia Indians' Nicotiana rustica—tasted dark and bitter to the English palate; it was John Rolfe who in 1612 obtained Spanish seeds, or Nicotiana tabacum, from the Orinoco River valley—seeds that, when planted in the relatively rich bottomland of the James River, produced a milder, yet still dark leaf that soon became the European standard. Over the next 160 years, tobacco production spread from the Tidewater area to the Blue Ridge Mountains, especially dominating the agriculture of the Chesapeake region. Beginning in 1619 the General Assembly put in place requirements for the inspection of tobacco and mandated the creation of port towns and warehouses. This system assisted in the development of major settlements at Norfolk, Alexandria, and Richmond. Tobacco formed the basis of the colony's economy: it was used to purchase the indentured servants and slaves to cultivate it, to pay local taxes and tithes, and to buy manufactured goods from England. Promissory notes payable in tobacco were even used as currency, with the cost of almost every commodity, from servants to wives, given in pounds of tobacco. Large planters usually shipped their tobacco directly to England, where consignment agents sold it in exchange for a cut of the profits, while smaller planters worked with local agents who bought their tobacco and supplied them with manufactured goods. In the mid-seventeenth century, overproduction and shipping disruptions related to a series of British wars caused the price of tobacco to fluctuate wildly. Prices stabilized again in the 1740s and 1750s, but the financial standings of small and large planters alike deteriorated throughout the 1760s and into the 1770s. By the advent of the American Revolution (1775–1783), some planters had switched to growing food crops, particularly wheat; many more began to farm these crops to support the war effort. In the first year of fighting, tobacco production in Virginia dropped to less than 25 percent of its annual prewar output.