According to homes and abodes, Lost Paradise|...without difference unify but within same diversify.... is about home abode ownership and joint venture junction e.g jungle junction, synaptic junction between or among holistic partite beings of the decks life and death or non (life and death) beings or deities e.g plants and animals who are clients, customers or staffs at home abode with teaming far choices and near home abode with teaming far choices 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 ownership is generally categorized into two main frameworks: how the property is legally held between people (title) and what part of the physical property you actually own (tenure).
1. Legal Ownership Structures (How you hold the title)
These types define who is on the deed and what happens to the property if an owner passes away.
Sole Ownership: A single individual holds the entire legal title.
Pros: Complete control over decisions like selling or leasing.
Cons: The property typically must go through probate (a legal court process) to transfer to heirs after death.
Joint Tenancy (with Rights of Survivorship): Two or more people own equal shares of the entire property.
Key Feature: If one owner dies, their share automatically passes to the surviving owners without going through probate.
Tenancy in Common: Multiple people own specific shares, which do not have to be equal.
Key Feature: There is no right of survivorship; owners can leave their specific share to anyone in their will.
Tenancy by the Entirety: A specialized form of joint ownership exclusively for married couples (available in some U.S. states).
Benefit: It often provides stronger protection against creditors who may be trying to collect a debt from only one spouse.
Trust Ownership: The property is held by a "trustee" for the benefit of a "beneficiary".
Benefit: Often used to avoid probate, maintain privacy, or manage assets for minors.
2. Property Tenure Types (What you physically own)
These types describe your relationship to the land and the building.
Freehold (Fee Simple): The most complete form of ownership where you own the building and the land it sits on indefinitely.
Leasehold: You own the right to occupy the building for a fixed term (e.g., 99 or 125 years) but do not own the land itself. You typically pay "ground rent" to a freeholder.
Condominium (Condo): You own your specific unit (the "airspace") and a shared percentage of common areas like hallways and gyms.
Co-operative (Co-op): You don't technically own real estate. Instead, you own shares in a corporation that owns the building, which grants you a "proprietary lease" to live in a specific unit.
Key Tenure Types
Freehold: The owner owns the building and the land it sits on indefinitely.
Leasehold: The owner holds the rights to the property for a specific period through a lease with a freeholder.
Commonhold/Condominium: Owners own their specific unit, with joint ownership of common areas.
Cross-Lease: A complex structure where owners share the freehold of the entire land, while leasing their specific unit from all owners.
A joint venture (JV) is a strategic, often temporary, business arrangement where two or more parties collaborate, pooling resources, knowledge, and capital to achieve a specific project or objective. Partners share risks, governance, profits, and losses while maintaining their independent legal identities. Common reasons for forming a JV include entering new markets (e.g., in Saudi Arabia, like the Savola Group acquisition) or sharing technology and infrastructure.
Key Aspects of Joint Ventures:
Purpose: Usually created for a single, specific project or to combine complementary skills.
Structure:
Can be incorporated (forming a new legal entity) or contractual (unincorporated)
.
Benefits: Enables access to new markets, shared risk, cost savings, and access to new technology.
Key Document: A Joint Venture Agreement is crucial to outline rights, obligations, and profit/loss distribution.
Examples: Sony & Honda (Afeela) (electric vehicles), Uber & Volvo (self-driving cars), and Starbucks & Tata in India.
While similar to a partnership, a JV is typically narrower in scope and duration. They are common in sectors requiring high investment, such as oil and gas, or in international business expansion.
A synaptic junction (synapse) is the specialized site where a neuron communicates with another neuron, muscle, or gland cell. It consists of a presynaptic terminal, a synaptic cleft (20–40 nm gap), and a postsynaptic membrane. Communication occurs via chemical neurotransmitters or direct electrical current through gap junctions.
Key Components and Mechanisms
Structure: The junction includes the transmitting neuron (presynaptic), the gap, and the receiving cell (postsynaptic).
Chemical Synapses: Utilize neurotransmitters released from vesicles into the cleft, which then bind to receptors on the postsynaptic membrane to trigger, excite, or inhibit a response.
Electrical Synapses: Feature gap junctions that allow direct ionic current flow, enabling faster transmission and synchronization, common in the central nervous system.
Function: They act as physiological valves, directing nerve impulses and enabling information storage through synaptic plasticity.
Termination: Signals are terminated via enzymatic breakdown, re-uptake, or diffusion of neurotransmitters
Freehold is a form of property ownership where you own both the building and the land it stands on outright, in perpetuity (indefinitely). It offers maximum control, no ground rent, and higher resale value compared to leasehold. Common types include fee simple and life estate, allowing full, permanent property rights.
Key Aspects of Freehold Ownership:
Concept & Ownership: Freehold means you are the "freeholder" or "tenant in fee simple," holding the property without a fixed time limit and without a superior landlord.
Advantages:
Full Control: You have complete autonomy over the property and land, including making structural changes (subject to local planning laws).
No Ground Rent: There are no ground rent charges or lease extensions to pay, which are typical with leasehold.
Value Retention: Freehold properties generally retain their value better and are easier to sell than leasehold properties.
Types of Freehold:
Fee Simple: The most common, absolute ownership that can be inherited or sold.
Life Estate: Ownership lasts only for the life of the tenant.
Freehold: You own the structure and the land permanently.
Leasehold: You own the right to occupy the building for a set period, but the land belongs to a freeholder.
Responsibilities & Taxes: You are solely responsible for all maintenance, repairs, and insurance costs for the property and land. Tax implications include paying property taxes directly to local authorities, and in some jurisdictions, capital gains tax upon sale, but no "leasehold" specific fees.
The primary Bible verse regarding finding strength in weakness is 2 Corinthians 12:9, where God tells Paul, "My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness".
Here are the key Bible verses often cited regarding weakhold/weakness and finding strength in God:
2 Corinthians 12:10 (ESV): "For the sake of Christ, then, I am content with weaknesses, insults, hardships, persecutions, and calamities. For when I am weak, then I am strong".
Isaiah 40:29-31: "He gives power to the faint and to him who has no might he increases strength... they who wait for the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings like eagles".
1 Corinthians 1:27: "But God chose what is foolish in the world to shame the wise; God chose what is weak in the world to shame the strong".
Hebrews 11:34: Describes those who "out of weakness were made strong, waxed valiant in fight, turned to flight the armies of the aliens".
Psalm 73:26: "My flesh and my heart may fail, but God is the strength of my heart and my portion forever"
Context on Weakness in the Bible:
Divine Empowerment: The Bible teaches that God's strength is fully displayed not in human might but in human weakness, encouraging believers to rely on His power.
Boasting in Weakness: Paul encourages boasting in infirmities so that the power of Christ may rest upon the believer.
Surrender: When feeling weak, the recommendation is to turn to God in prayer and "wait on the Lord" to renew strength
The term "weakhold" is primarily a community-coined play on the word "stronghold," used in various gaming contexts to describe a structure or faction that is ironically small, poorly defended, or underwhelming.
The primary Bible verse regarding "strongholds" is 2 Corinthians 10:4-5, which speaks of divine power to demolish mental strongholds, arguments, and lofty opinions that oppose God. It emphasizes taking thoughts captive to obey Christ. Another perspective highlights God Himself as a spiritual refuge or stronghold.
Key Stronghold Bible Verses
2 Corinthians 10:4-5 (ESV): "For the weapons of our warfare are not of the flesh but have divine power to destroy strongholds. We destroy arguments and every lofty opinion raised against the knowledge of God, and take every thought captive to obey Christ".
Psalm 9:9 (NIV): "The Lord is a refuge for the oppressed, a stronghold in times of trouble".
Psalm 34:4 (NIV): "I sought the Lord, and he answered me; he delivered me from all my fears".
2 Timothy 1:7 (NKJV): "For God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind"
Understanding Strongholds in Scripture
Mental Battles: In 2 Corinthians, strongholds refer to false arguments, speculations, or mindsets that oppose the knowledge of God and hinder spiritual growth.
Spiritual Warfare: These verses highlight that believers use spiritual weapons (truth, prayer, word of God) rather than human strength to overcome these mental barriers.
God as a Stronghold: In the Psalms, a "stronghold" is often a metaphor for God being a safe, high place of protection and security in times of trouble.
Other Relevant Verses
Ephesians 6:13-18: Mentions putting on the whole armor of God to stand firm.
1 Corinthians 10:13: Notes that God provides a way out of temptation.
Stronghold most commonly refers to a fortified place or a popular real-time strategy video game series. It can also describe figurative safe havens, religious concepts, or specific commercial brands.
General Definitions
Fortification: A physical building or structure, such as a castle or fort, designed to be safe from attack and easy to defend.
Refuge or Center: A place of security or survival (e.g., "one of the last strongholds of an ancient language").
Predominance: An area dominated by a specific group or characteristic (e.g., a "political stronghold")