Definition, Meaning, Synonyms & Anagrams | English word LOTS
LOTS
Definitions of LOTS
- plural of lot.
- (colloquial) A lot; a great deal; tons; loads.
- (colloquial) A great deal; very much.
- inflection of lot
Number of letters
4
Is palindrome
No
Examples of Using LOTS in a Sentence
- In systems engineering, it may involve black-box testing performed on a system (for example: a piece of software, lots of manufactured mechanical parts, or batches of chemical products) prior to its delivery.
- The original plans for the town of Chicago left the area east of Michigan Avenue unsubdivided and vacant, and purchasers of Michigan Avenue lots were promised that it would remain unoccupied.
- About 1800, the Holland Land Company, formed by American businessmen and their Dutch associates, extinguished aboriginal claims by purchasing the land from New York, acquired the title to the territory of what are today the eight westernmost counties of New York, surveyed their holdings, established towns and began selling lots to individuals.
- The courthouse square was defined and about 77 lots, each 50 by , were auctioned off for a total profit of US$3,400.
- Public demand remained strong, and Little, Brown continued to reprint the book in cautious lots for many months, with at least two reprintings per month.
- The subway was originally built by Leonard's Department Store in 1963, connecting the store to its large parking lots on the edge of downtown.
- Its task was to distribute land to 5,000 colonists in lots of ten jugera in the ager Campanus and in lots of twelve jugera in the nearby campus Stellaris (both areas were in Campania, north of Naples).
- Townships are referred to as "lots" in Prince Edward Island; they merely form census subdivisions and are not administrative units.
- The area was not a popular one for lottery draws as the straws were drawn sight unseen and the winner was as likely to draw swampland as he was prime agricultural lots.
- Even while Cherokees remained on their homeland, the General Assembly enacted legislation in December 1830 that provided for surveying the Cherokee Nation in Georgia and dividing it into sections, districts, and land lots.
- Lots for the new town were auctioned in October 1833, with proceeds from the sale financing the construction of a courthouse and jail.
- A land speculator from Georgia, he purchased the land that the village of Koasati occupied, and sub-divided it into lots for sale.
- Murphy sold at public auction a great number of individual business and residential lots which would be developed into the town of Akron, Alabama.
- Manning, called for estate-sized lots along winding scenic roads and denser commercial development centering on three picturesque "villages": English Village, Mountain Brook Village and Crestline Village.
- This village site first attracted squatters and small farmers, however, when Fenwick recognized the possibilities of a town, he purchased land, and offered lots for sale in 1818.
- In 1919, the railroad surveyed and auctioned eighty lots, 41 of which already had permanent structures on them.
- The founding of Thatcher is attributed to Mormon pioneer Christopher Layton, who bought two thousand acres, named the acreage "Thatcher", divided them into lots, and sold those lots to Mormon settlers.
- In 1895, Murphy platted the original town site and amended the plat to include a town park and some business lots.
- In the 1880s, when the land was being surveyed so it could be developed into agricultural lots, the name "Paradise Valley" first came into use, given by surveyors from the Rio Verde Canal Company and its manager at the time, Frank Conkey.
- Carruth and his wife, Rachel, sold 50 lots of land given to him by his father, Ladson Carruth, to the Arkansas Central Railroad.
- Although planned and developed as a large resort community with an extensive road, water, sewer and power grid capable of supporting 40,000 residents on 12,000 residential lots, demand for property in Salton City fell drastically short of the planners' expectations.
- A significant portion of Avocado Heights remains equestrian and semi-rural, with many homes on lots of 0.
- Such parcels, often referred to as "railroad lots", were intended to allow the new town's residents to keep a large vegetable garden, a grove of fruit trees (usually citrus), and a chicken coop or horse stable.
- Lots sold slowly and different promotions were tried, such as promoting Lawndale as a chicken raising area.
- Incorporated in 1957, Rolling Hills maintains a rural and equestrian character, with no traffic lights, multi-acre lots with ample space between homes, and wide equestrian paths along streets and property lines.
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