The word chattel is encountered in two main senses. The earlier of the two is primarily technical and refers to property, specifically property that is distinct from real estate holdings. The second meaning of chattel can excite considerable emotion, as it refers to humans as property, i.e., slaves. Chattel, slave and the less common bondman and thrall are all synonyms for a person held in servitude by another. Chattel and cattle both come to English from the same source: each is descended from the Medieval Latin word capitale, which itself traces to the Latin caput meaning “head.”
Examples of chattel in a Sentence
at one time, the children of black slaves were also considered chattel
packed up all her chattels and moved to a new state
These example sentences are selected automatically from various online news sources to reflect current usage of the word 'chattel.' Views expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
: an item of tangible or intangible personal propertyespecially: chattel personal in this entry
Note:
In some jurisdictions the term chattel is restricted to items of tangible and movable personal property. Other jurisdictions also classify intangible assets and property items as chattels.
—chattel personalplural chattels personal
: an item of tangible movable personal property (as livestock or an automobile) that is not permanently connected with real estate
—chattel realplural chattels real
: an interest (as a leasehold or profit a prendre) in an item of immovable property (as land or a building) that is less than a freehold estate — compare fixture
Note:
Interests that are considered chattels real have been treated by the common law as personal property despite being interests in real property.
History and Etymology for chattel
Old French chatel goods, property, from Medieval Latin capitale, from neuter of capitalis chief, principal — see capital