Title is the official part of a name indicating status or function. Can refer to books, songs, works of art, statutes, or legal documents
Belonging to oneself or itself, usually after possessive case. Expresses immediate or direct kinship. Can refer to one or ones belonging to oneself
Certificate of registration serves as proof of ownership for property or goods. Issued to both tangible and intangible property owners. Provided with property during sale transactions
Personal pronouns declension is regular except for ben/sen in dative and ben/biz in genitive. Siz can be used as singular in formal contexts with higher rank or strangers. Biz is rarely used for oneself, expressing humility or irony. Genitive onun cannot refer to sentence subject
Intellectual property includes intangible creations of human intellect. Modern concept developed in England during 17th-18th centuries. Term "intellectual property" first used in 1769. Venice Patent Statute (1474) considered earliest codified patent system
USPS recognized state abbreviations in 1831, preferring full spelling. Modern two-letter codes introduced in 1963 for ZIP codes. Nebraska changed from NB to NE in 1969 to avoid Canadian confusion