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Liquid
1. Readily flowing fluid whose molecules move freely with respect to each
other, unlike a solid, but not expanding indefinitely like a gas because
of cohesive forces.
2. Financial status whereby an individual or business can convert a significant
percentage of assets to cash quickly.
3. Characteristic of an investment. Indicates that the investment can
be quickly sold or converted to cash.
Liquid
Assets
Assets that can be converted to cash quickly, including money in money-
market accounts, savings and checking accounts and some certificates of
deposit.
Liquid
Membrane
Material, such as asphalt or tar based liquid containing glass fibers,
which is applied to a roof and solidifies to form a membrane to seal the
roof.
Liquid
Penetrant Examination (PT)
Non-destructive test, which uses a penetrating dye to locate, cracks in
the surface of a material, particularly a nonporous material.
Liquid
Resin Glue
Non-water proof glue that works best with joints that already fit tightly.
Liquid
Sandpaper
Chemical solution that is used to remove thin layers of surface coatings,
rather than using sandpaper.
Liquid-tight
Flexible Metal Conduit
Flexible, protective tubing, which is covered with waterproof plastic
coating.
Liquefied
Petroleum Gas
Fuel made from propane, butane or a combination.
Liquidate
To convert assets into money. To dispose of or get rid of.
Liquidated
Damages
Amount agreed upon that one party will pay the other in the event of a
breach of a contract.
Liquidation
Conversion of assets into money. The breaking up and selling assets of
a company for cash distribution to its creditors and then owners. Chapter
7 bankruptcy is a liquidation.
Liquidation
Price
Cash value or other consideration that can be received in a forced sale
of assets. Liquidation value is typically less than that which could be
received from selling assets in the normal course of business.
Liquidation
Value
Amount a property would bring under an immediate sale, minus costs of
the transaction.
Liquidity
Ability to obtain close to the true value of an asset by converting it
into cash, quickly.
Lis
Pendens
Latin for suit pending. Recorded notice of the filing of suit, the outcome
of which may affect title to a certain piece of property.
List
1. To secure a listing by a real estate agent for a certain piece of property.
2. A series of words, names, numbers, etc. arranged in order. To catalog.
3. Lean toward a side.
List
of Materials
Itemized accounting of the materials required to construct an item.
Listing
1. Property placed on the market by a real estate listing agent.
2. The agreement between the owner and the broker to sell a property.
Listing
Agent
The sales agent who had obtained the right from a seller to handle the
marketing of a piece of property.
Listing
Broker
The real estate broker who is responsible for the listing of a property
and who is to represent the interests of the seller. Brokers are licensed
and able to run their own companies. Not all agents are brokers.
Listing
Form
The prepared form used to specify terms of the listing agreement.
Listing
Inventories
The amount of houses for sale within a given market.
Litharge
An oxide of lead that is used in ceramic cements, leaded glass, storage
batteries, paints & enamels, etc.
Lithopone
White pigment obtained by mixing barium sulfate with zinc sulfate and
zinc oxide, which is used in white paints, and as coloring in linoleum.
Litigation
The act or process of carrying on a lawsuit. Alternately, the lawsuit
itself.
Litmus
Purple coloring matter obtained from various lichens, used as an acid
indicator in chemical analysis because it turns blue in alkaline solutions
and red in acid solutions.
Littoral
Land abutting a large body of water, such as the ocean or a lake.
Littoral
Rights
Rights concerning property adjoining a large body of water, such as an
ocean or a lake and concern the ability of the littoral property owner
to use the shore and the adjoining water.
Live
Wire carrying electrical current.
Live
Load
1. A load, measured in pounds per square inch, of things that are in addition
to the weight of a structure and not part of the building itself. Occupants,
furniture, etc. qualify as part of this temporary source.
2. Load on any part of a crane that changes in amount.
Live
Load Deflection
Cranes are built so that they can compensate for the vertical deviation
of the bridge, which occurs because of the weight of the crane trolley
and the weight of the load.
Live-In
Partnership
Two unrelated people purchasing a home.
Live-work
Space
Dwelling designated to conduct a home-based business.
Livering
Term for the mass of congealed paint left in a paint can.
Living
Unit
One single dwelling, condo, apartment, house, etc.
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