Justice is the foundation of property
For some reason, this is what comes to my mind when I think of immovable property. I checked the dictionary of the Turkish Language Association and I was not wrong. It says that houses, shops, land, etc. are immovable property. It has another meaning: a place or structure that is not a foundation but directly owned by someone.
We always say that the foundation of justice is property, and then we add that property is the state.
Actually, when we say property, we also say "our property". In the sense of rich, a man is like an agha, he has a lot of property.
I mean he has fields, houses.
For some reason, this is what comes to my mind when I think of immovable property.
I checked the dictionary of the Turkish Language Association and I was not wrong.
It says that houses, shops, land, etc. are immovable property.
It has another meaning: a place or structure that is not a foundation but directly owned by someone.
This has the same meaning, in fact, it means immovable.
But one more meaning is written, and the old usage is noted: The whole of the territory under the sovereignty of the state, country.
Now I understand why, when they say "justice is the foundation of property", they remind us that property here means the state. It means that in the past, the state's real estate was also called property.
Actually, I'm a bit confused now, is property the immovable property or the state? Because when we talk about justice, we cannot be talking about property. The word "property" is more in line with the concept of the state.
What actually is this property?
I'd better analyze it etymologically.
As always, the etymological dictionary says that this word came into our language from Arabic.
Sometimes I wonder if we are really Turks. Why do we have so many Arabic words in our language, why did we not derive words that are unique to us in our own culture, but preferred to acquire them from another language?
I came across it somewhere recently and I was amazed. In our history, we even gave Jupiter a name.
Perhaps we have forgotten some words over time and started to use them less frequently.
Cultural erosion, what can I say.
Jupiter? Does anyone know?
Erendiz! Have you heard of him?
I actually heard that Erendiz has a story. I will research it more and share it with you later.
By the way, there's also Sekendiz, Saturn!
Çolpan, Yertinç, Bakırsokum, Erdenay, Kızıldız, Altayhan, Talayhan. You can research these for yourself if you wish.
By the way, the suffix "-diz" is really interesting, isn't it. Day, star, do these remind you of anything? They both end with the same suffix "-düz, -dız"! Sister-in-law also ends with the same suffix, is there a connection?
This suffix means brightness!
Anyway, where did I start and where did I end up? Let me go back to the etymological dictionary.
We were talking about property, weren't we?
The etymological dictionary says "possession and sovereignty, ownership, sovereignty, sovereignty, sovereignty, kingdom". The thing that is owned, sovereignty, state.
Being an owner comes from the same root.
So yes, when we say "Justice is the foundation of property", the property here is the state.
Look at what I am stuck on, when I say "Justice is the foundation of property", what is property?
Actually, I think the subject here is the word "justice", no matter what it is the foundation of, isn't the important thing JUSTICE?
I'm not talking about Aunt Justice.
I keep getting messages from somewhere saying "Good Friday" these days. For some reason, someone is obsessed with Friday. However, I don't know if there is anything good about Friday, it is essentially a day of gathering.
I'd like to say "auspicious Sunday". I think you should get some rest.
But never leave justice!
Love and respect to everyone from Moscow.