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Finders, keepers, sometimes extended as the children's rhyme finders, keepers; losers, weepers, is an English adage with the premise that when something is unowned or abandoned, whoever finds it first can claim it for themself permanently.
Abandon, a 2002 film starring Katie Holmes; Abandoned, starring Dennis O'Keefe; Abandoned, the English language title of the Italian war film Gli Sbandati; Abandoned, a Hungarian film; Abandoned, starring Brittany Murphy; Abandoned, a television movie about the shipwreck of the Rose-Noëlle in 1989
Ghost Town Village, an abandoned Wild West theme park in Maggie Valley, North Carolina, US Ghost Town, a themed area in Knott's Berry Farm , Buena Park, California, US Ghosttown, an area in The Great Escape and Hurricane Harbor theme park, Queensbury, New York, US
An abandoned 16,000-square-foot mansion in the English countryside is on sale for $500,000 - take a look inside the eerie home emcdowell@businessinsider.com (Erin McDowell) September 18, 2020 at 4 ...
Orphans by Thomas Kennington, oil on canvas, 1885. An orphan is a child whose parents have died, are unknown or have permanently abandoned them. It can also refer to a child who has lost only one parent, as the Hebrew translation, for example, is "fatherless".
Flotsam on a beach at Terschelling, Wadden Sea. In maritime law, flotsam, jetsam, lagan, and derelict are terms for various types of property lost or abandoned at sea. The words have specific nautical meanings, with legal consequences in the law of admiralty and marine salvage. [1]
Evicted & Abandoned. Inside The World Bank’s Broken Promise To Protect The Poor. Ethiopia. New Evidence Ties World Bank to Human Rights Abuses in Ethiopia. Peru. How The World Bank Is Financing Environmental Destruction. India. A Power Plant Backed By The World Bank Group Threatens A Way Of Life. Honduras
An item that has been abandoned is termed an abandum. [4] A res nullius abandoned by its owner, leaving it vacant, belongs to no one. In the American legal and media context, investigative reporters have relied on the concepts of abandonment or "constructive abandonment" in receiving documents from sources.