Definition
An enclosed land, especially in medieval law; a piece of ground enclosed or fenced off as private property.
Etymology
From Latin clausum (closed, enclosed), past participle of claudere. Used in English legal history to describe landholdings with defined boundaries.
Kelly Says
The concept of 'clausum' is foundational to property law—it's the medieval legal idea that land becomes 'yours' when it's enclosed and defended, which still echoes in modern boundary disputes.
Translations
ARالعربية
مُحَددٌ
muḥaddadun
CACatalà
clausula
klau-zu-la
CSČeština
klausule
klau-zu-le
DADansk
klausul
klau-su-l
DEDeutsch
Clausum
klau-sum
ELΕλληνικά
σtipulation
stig-u-la-tion
ESEspañol
clausum
klau-sum
FISuomi
klausuli
klaus-u-li
FRFrançais
clausum
klau-sum
HAHA
muhimmanci
mu-him-man-ci
HUMagyar
klausula
klau-su-la
IDBahasa Indonesia
klausul
klau-zu-l
ITItaliano
clausola
klau-zo-la
MSBahasa Melayu
klausul
klau-zu-l
MYမြန်မာ
ပြဋ္ဌာန်း
pyit-tha-na
NLNederlands
clausule
klau-zu-le
NONorsk
klausul
klau-su-l
PLPolski
klauzula
klau-zu-la
PTPortuguês
clausum
klau-sum
RORomână
clausule
klau-zu-le
RUРусский
клаузула
klavzula
SVSvenska
klausul
klau-su-l
SWKiswahili
klausul
klau-zu-l
TAதமிழ்
சட்டப்படி
sattap-pdi
THไทย
ข้อตกลง
khor-dtok-long
TRTürkçe
klausül
klau-zyül
UKУкраїнська
klausula
klauzula
VITiếng Việt
Điều khoản
dieu khoan
ZUZU
inkosana
in-ko-sa-na