Home Abode Games
Home Abode Games
The home abode games activities or passivities are similar to and different from (spirit, body, soul) mechanisms or processes associating and dissociating within or without e.g:
Biological (cells, tissues, organs, systems, cycles)
Chemical (atoms, elements, molecules, compounds, mixtures, colloids)
Pathology, Anatomy, Embryology, Histology, Biochemistry, Physiology of:
Life and death beings or deities e.g plants and animals
Non (life and death) beings or deities e.g animals and plants
of Allah Allow by Sounds, Speeches, Symbols, and Species of Allah Allow via God Yahweh, Mob Yehovah, Alpha Dog, Omega Bom, Mother Nature and Father Nurture through Jesus Christ, Emmanuel Mohammed, Goat Ram, Jaja of Opobo, John the Baptist, Satan Devil.
The home abode games will be linked with home abode ownership through basic and applied medical sciences, therapies, law and order, legal and cycle, justice system, cooking, stitching, pitching, fertilization, engineering, fine and applied arts, health and social care, occupational health and safety, waste management, construction, architecture, farming, gardening, archaeology etc.
The home abode ownership types typically include freehold (complete ownership of land and building), leasehold (owning the right to occupy for a set term), and commonhold (owning a unit within a jointly owned building) . Ownership structure can be sole (one owner) or joint (joint tenants/tenants in common).
Key Types of Home Ownership
Freehold: You own the building and the land it stands on outright indefinitely, says The Law Society.
Leasehold: You own the property for a fixed period (the lease) but not the land, usually common with flats. You must pay ground rent and service charges, notes The Law Society.
Commonhold: A newer form where you own your unit outright and jointly own the common areas of the building with other residents, explains The Law Society.
Shared Ownership: A hybrid scheme where you buy a share (25%–75%) of a property and pay rent on the rest, often offered by housing associations, says GOV.UK.
Ways to Hold Title
Sole Ownership: A single person owns the property, according to Shelter England.
Joint Tenants: Two or more people own the property equally. If one person dies, the ownership automatically passes to the survivor, explains GOV.UK.
Tenants in Common: Owners hold specific, distinct shares (e.g., 50/50, 70/30). They can leave their share to someone else in their will, notes GOV.UK.
Specialized Ownership
Shared Freehold: Residents own the freehold of their building jointly, often managed through a company, says Ellis & Co.
Affordable Ownership Schemes: Government-backed schemes designed to help first-time buyers or low-income households purchase homes, such as Right to Buy, notes GOV.UK.