stored or kept

stored or kept
Warehoused or deposited for safekeeping. 29A Am J Rev ed Ins § 921 (involving condition in insurance policy that certain articles shall not be "stored or kept" upon the premises.) See storing or keeping.

Ballentine's law dictionary. . 1998.

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  • kept — Maintained; supported. Possessed or held in custody. Even possessing a thing for a short period of time, as in the case of intoxicating liquor in a restaurant brought there by a patron for immediate consumption. Fritzel v United States (CA7 Ill)… …   Ballentine's law dictionary

  • kept — (Roget s IV) modif. 1. [Preserved] Syn. put up, stored, conserved; see preserved 2 . 2. [Retained] Syn. maintained, withheld, held, clutched, guarded, watched over, reserved, saved, on file, at hand, kept in reserve; see also retained 1 , saved 2 …   English dictionary for students

  • stored food — collection of food, reserve rations; food kept in storage, food set aside …   English contemporary dictionary

  • Java stored procedure — A Java stored procedure is a set of SQL statements, written in the Java programming language, grouped together as an executable unit.A stored procedure is a program that is kept and executed within a database server. The procedure is called from… …   Wikipedia

  • well-kept — /ˈwɛl kɛpt/ (say wel kept) adjective carefully stored, protected, maintained, etc. Also, (especially in predicative use), well kept /wɛl ˈkɛpt/ (say wel kept) …  

  • being kept — being held, being preserved, being protected; being stored; caution, taking precautionary measures, concern …   English contemporary dictionary

  • Telecommunications data retention — In the field of telecommunications, data retention (or data preservation) generally refers to the storage of call detail records (CDRs) of telephony and internet traffic and transaction data (IPDRs) by governments and commercial organisations. In …   Wikipedia

  • store — I. transitive verb (stored; storing) Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French estorer to establish, restore, supply, from Latin instaurare to resume, restore Date: 13th century 1. lay away, accumulate < store vegetables for winter use > < an… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • reserve — re·serve 1 vt re·served, re·serv·ing: to keep back or set apart: as a: to keep (a right, power, or interest) esp. by express declaration all rights reserved compare waive b: to defer a determination of (a question of law) …   Law dictionary

  • stack — stacker, n. stackless, adj. /stak/, n. 1. a more or less orderly pile or heap: a precariously balanced stack of books; a neat stack of papers. 2. a large, usually conical, circular, or rectangular pile of hay, straw, or the like. 3. Often, stacks …   Universalium

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