How To Use Bequeath In A Sentence

  • 'I knew a case once where an heir who expected a large sum of money was bequeathed a family Bible, which he threw into the fire, learning afterwards, to his dismay, that it contained many thousands of pounds in Bank of England notes, the object of the devisor being to induce the legatee to read the good Book or suffer through the neglect of it.' The Triumphs of Eugène Valmont
  • And if you're really lucky, it will tell you who they bequeathed their money to. The Sun
  • If the executors do not appear, but the claimant can prove by inquest that the testator bequeathed him the tenement, it shall be delivered to him.
  • She bequeathed her collection of paintings to the National Gallery.
  • Mary and Elizabeth did not obtain landed patrimonies because their father bequeathed them estates in his will. From Heads of Household to Heads of State: The Preaccession Households of Mary and Elizabeth Tudor, 1516-1558
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  • Aside from the inheritance proper, a will could contain legacies whereby things were bequeathed by a single title and by express words; they could be imperative or precative. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 9: Laprade-Mass Liturgy
  • He had by a second will bequeathed all his possessions to the Church, reserving in them a life-interest for his virtual wife; and when the cousinry swooped down on what they thought their prey, Madame Mulhausen could receive them and their condolences with the indignant scorn which their greed and cruelty deserved. A Handbook to the Works of Browning (6th ed.)
  • Hurricane Katrina ‘is giving our nation a glimpse of the climate chaos we are bequeathing our children.’
  • Her father bequeathed her the family fortune in his will.
  • The Standish Collection was bequeathed to King Louis-Philippe of France and was eventually sold in London in 1853.
  • You didn't resent him to the point of rejecting his bequeathal. Where There's Smoke
  • Tor Edgar is a giant man peering out shyly from behind glasses bequeathed by John Lennon.
  • If there is a legally drawn up will, property is bequeathed by the estate holder.
  • The house had been confiscated by Octavian during the wave of proscriptions in the aftermath of the Battle of Philippi from the family of Quintus Hortensius, the famous orator and great rival of Cicero who had amassed a fortune from his legal career and subsequently bequeathed the villa to his daughter Hortensia and son Quintus Hortensius Hortalus. Caesars’ Wives
  • They should try and bequeath us their memoirs, autographies or a collection of their speeches to enable us benefit from their experience, knowledge and wisdom to serve as a guide to the present and future generations.
  • Most medical schools accept anatomical bequeathals for biomedical research and the training of Physicians, Surgeons, Dentists, and other Health Care Professionals.
  • But above all, his mistake was to assume that he had done enough to win simply by being competent in office and by bequeathing a healthy economy.
  • If memory serves me right DN1 belonged to a private car owner who bequeathed the number plate to the City of York.
  • The individual owner, of course, may in turn sell, give or bequeath his property to any other individual or to the state.
  • They bequeathed their home to their children, after creating a shareholders' association aimed at preserving everything unchanged, and it was occupied until 2002 when Stoclet's daughter-in-law Anny died and her daughters opted not to move back into what they once considered a " maison enchantée . An Enchanted House Becomes a Family's Curse
  • Most of the adults present were dancing unselfconsciously, meaning that we were able to bequeath our best moves to our son before he got too old to know any better. British Blogs
  • They retook Jerusalem in July 1099, creating Crusader states which would last for almost two centuries and bequeathing an enduring legacy which continues to influence the Christian and Islamic worlds today.
  • She was deposed not by the voters but by the Conservatives to whom she has bequeathed an equivocal legacy. Times, Sunday Times
  • The aim of teaching classical poems at college is to inherit and bequeath the cultural heritage, to foster students' taste and interest in literature, to develop students' poetic connoisseurship.
  • If you're passing the house down to one person, you typically can give it to him or her outright as a gift while you are still alive or bequeath it in your will. Create a Plan to Pass On the Family Cottage
  • In my experience, actual wills have been drawn up bequeathing property to persons, when the testator (person making the will) did not have ownership of the property, and thus did not have the right to give the property to anyone.
  • But the wealthy Egyptian more commonly provided for the future of his Ka by bequeathing a portion of his estate to the priesthood, in prepayment for sepulchral meals in perpetuity. Pharaohs, Fellahs and Explorers
  • As they provided in their will as they bequeathed it in trust and confirmed it under oath, so on their terms I hold it. Christianity Today
  • Upon her death, he is bequeathed her unfinished work and is left with the question of how to proceed. Times, Sunday Times
  • As they provided in their will as they bequeathed it in trust and confirmed it under oath, so on their terms I hold it. Christianity Today
  • It was the richest legacy he could possibly have bequeathed to his people.
  • By his will dated 8th June 1956 he appointed the Mother to be his executrix and bequeathed all his property whatsoever or wheresoever to her.
  • The dictionary meaning of "bequeath": 1) to leave (property, etc.) to another by one's will; 2) to hand down, to pass on. Museum Blogs
  • She bequeathed her collection of paintings to the National Gallery.
  • There is also the ancient issue of aligning the man-made year with the solar year, but that's relatively easy to deal with by creating 31 September - or bequeathing another day to much-maligned February.
  • It is where the great man lived and worked, and bequeathed an architectural legacy worthy of envy. The Sun
  • Luis Ojeda, who humbly took to himself the title of _Luis el Pecador_ (Luis the Sinner), bequeathed all his fortune to the foundation of this establishment, which received the name of "Collegio de Santa Cruz de los niños expositos." [ Travels in Peru, on the Coast, in the Sierra, Across the Cordilleras and the Andes, into the Primeval Forests
  • A loophole in the rules allows council house tenants to "bequeath" their tenancies when they die. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • He has bequeathed to the world a rich discography of 10 full opera recordings, a Verdi ‘Requiem’, and many fine recital discs.
  • Is it a country where the line between church and state bequeathed to us by our Founding Fathers should be inviolate?
  • Their deity, Goddess Vankul Mata ji, rides on a camel and specifically bequeathed the animal to them.
  • We have several Funds that have been built up or which arise from bequeathals or other gifts, some designated for specific purposes.
  • This stance was bequeathed to future opponents of the government's plans, and it was extremely popular.
  • All the money and a beautiful diamond necklace are bequeathed to the servant.
  • It should be because we want to live up to the example of public servants like John Roll and Gabby Giffords, who knew first and foremost that we are all Americans, and that we can question each other's ideas without questioning each other's love of country, and that our task, working together, is to constantly widen the circle of our concern so that we bequeath the American dream to future generations. Obama saves Tucson memorial from the unseemly
  • Properly completed bequeathal forms have legal status, a formal last will and testament is not required.
  • Larry puzzled over the situation: Should the banquette be held for the diva, or bequeathed to the refreshingly unassuming — and relievedly present — young actress? Ye Waverly Blog: Stood Up: Vanity Fair
  • She bequeathed her collection of paintings to the National Gallery.
  • From these lower steps of the ladder the young man would certainly rise to the higher ranks of the administration, possessed of a fortune and a name bequeathed to him in Bureaucracy
  • Whatever surnominal adjective Kazuo Ishiguro finally bequeaths us (Ishiguronian? New Fiction
  • I bequeath it now as a cure for many kinds of ugliness.
  • We must always remember that when we write our history, we are trying to bequeath valuable records to our future generations.
  • Why we as a nation, have been titrated, which is the gradual increasing of dosage, pressure, and propaganda, till the desired effect – an inured and compliant society – have willingly bequeathed away our autonomy of self-government, embraced the genesis of tyranny, and begin our seemingly inexorable march towards dictatorship. Democracy Interrupted
  • For example, inheritance taking ceremonies might involve the those who have been bequeathed with inheritance by someone who has passed away making an oath to do something significant and then hallowing that oath by drinking a hornful of beer (could be 1 to 1.5 drinks) or mead (could be 3 – 4 drinks). The Volokh Conspiracy » District Attorney Suggests That It May Be a Crime for Teachers to Follow the New State Law Mandating Certain Forms of Sex Education
  • If you have no immediate next of kin available as a witness, the bequeathal is still legal.
  • The only reference to books in the will of Edward IV. is in regard to such as appertained "to oure chapell," which he bequeathed to his queen, such only being excepted "as we shall hereafter dispose to goo to oure saide Collage of Wyndesore. Studies from Court and Cloister: being essays, historical and literary dealing mainly with subjects relating to the XVIth and XVIIth centuries
  • They bequeathed an invaluable legacy of moral integrity, revolutionary thought and political organization on which their Bolshevik heirs were to draw.
  • In fact they are many of you, your children, your grandchildren and the legacy we bequeath must not be defeat and denial but glory and the celebration of their genius and ingenuity. Rick Tumlinson: Apollo's Children and the NewSpace Revolution
  • Traditionally, not only property is bequeathed, but social and political position as well.
  • The coin depicted to the left of the font represented Edward's divine ability to cure scrofula since he possessed what Plot termed ‘the gift of Sanation,’ which he bequeathed to his successors.
  • She was taking the nice little bequeathal Mr. Man had left her in his heart-wrenchingly sweet card—which had started her crying all over again when Doris had quietly handed it to her at the funeral—and buying William a token of her affection. Dragon Warrior
  • They bequeathed an invaluable legacy of moral integrity, revolutionary thought and political organization on which their Bolshevik heirs were to draw.
  • Alternatively, was it bequeathed to the nation by Great Leader himself — who, as is not generally appreciated here in America, despite being dead, remains en poste as President of North Korea until the end of time? The Mural
  • He bequeathed his daughter his entire estate.
  • It is where the great man lived and worked, and bequeathed an architectural legacy worthy of envy. The Sun
  • As you have been told, he bequeathed to you his duchy and his title of duke of Gandia. THE FAMILY
  • The octave does not seem to me very clearly put, and the sestet does not emphasize in a sufficiently striking way the idea which the prose sketch conveyed to me, -- that of Keats's special privilege in early death: viz., the lovely monumentalized image he bequeathed to us of the young poet. Recollections of Dante Gabriel Rossetti
  • bequeathed to the nation in perpetuity
  • She was deposed not by the voters but by the Conservatives to whom she has bequeathed an equivocal legacy. Times, Sunday Times
  • Once satisfied with the confirmation process, Legacy Locker will begin alerting any beneficiaries of assets bequeathed to them. What happens to your digital life after death?
  • Towards the end of the 17th century, land was bequeathed by a certain John Kershaw to endow a school in Waterfoot.
  • The spiralling costs of the upgrade of the Memorial Baths would appear to jeopardise other worthwhile community projects and bequeath a burden of debt on the city and its ratepayers for many years to come.
  • May-day dances and revelling have reached our days, and probably they have, like the Midsummer Eve's festivities, their origin in the far off times when the Fairy Tribe inhabited Britain and other countries, and to us have they bequeathed these Festivals, as well as that which ushers in winter, and is called in Wales, _Nos glan gaua_, or All Hallow Eve. Welsh Folk-Lore a Collection of the Folk-Tales and Legends of North Wales
  • By his will dated 8th June 1956 he appointed the Mother to be his executrix and bequeathed all his property whatsoever or wheresoever to her.
  • At his death in 1999 Edey bequeathed his collection of twenty-five clocks, fourteen watches, and an extensive horological library to the Frick Collection in New York City.
  • The most significant difference from 2001 is the looming change in the leadership election rules bequeathed by the former leader.
  • When dying the unfortunate musician bequeathed his daughter to the doctor, who was already her godfather, in spite of his repugnance for what he called the mummeries of the Church. Ursula
  • In Renaissance Venice wives were free to bequeath their dowries to whom they willed, whereas in Florence they were required by law to leave them to their children or husband.
  • In his last illness, an attack of asthma complicated with pectoral mischief, he sent to Noyon for his nephew Julien Galland212 to assist him in ordering his Mss. and in making his will after the simplest military fashion: he bequeathed his writings to the Bibliothèque du Roi, his Numismatic The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • The problem of Multilateral versus Multinational nuclear forces became another legacy bequeathed to the Wilson Government when it came to power.
  • The bit we like best is the idea that tax relief is available today for money that donors agree to bequeath to charities on their death.
  • All belong to the Courtauld, including nine recently bequeathed. Times, Sunday Times
  • He had bequeathed an enormous legacy, and had cast a great influence over 20th century music, with many composers having at least experimented with note rows and serialism even if they were not totally immersed in these techniques.
  • The problem of Multilateral versus Multinational nuclear forces became another legacy bequeathed to the Wilson Government when it came to power.
  • Just because they inherited a political and administrative tangle, it shouldn't inevitably follow that they bequeath an environmental disaster.
  • This wit, who has bequeathed to us no wit; this man of genius, who has formed no work of genius; this bold advocate for popular freedom, who sunk his patriotism in the chamberlainship; was indeed desirous of leaving behind him some trace of the life of an _escroc_ in a piece of autobiography, which, for the benefit of the world, has been thrown to the flames. Literary Character of Men of Genius Drawn from Their Own Feelings and Confessions
  • "He wants to bequeath control to his sons, " alleges an insider.
  • Islam and the Arabic language have bequeathed the Arabic alphabet for languages like Farsi, Urdu, Old Hausa and others.
  • The country's colonial past has bequeathed a wealth of Indonesian restaurants.
  • Apuleius's father held the office of duumvir, the highest magisterial position in Madaura; after his father's death Apuleius rose to duumvir himself, and inherited part of the sum of nearly two million sesterces his father bequeathed to his two sons.
  • In countries where the nobility are destitute of public employment, they naturally degenerate -- become the victims of the diseases of indolence and profligacy, transmit their decrepitude to their descendants, and bequeath dwarfishness and deformity to their name. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 55, No. 339, January, 1844
  • The Junior player kindly bequeathed his sweatshirt, which cost him $11 at the inmate store.
  • The 10 men's extraordinary act of selfless courage in dying to assert their political status was in turn to bequeath political status on a resurgent republican movement.
  • The first was a fine gold Tissot, bequeathed to me by my Uncle Harold, along with a venerable pair of tan brogues.
  • Mary bequeathed half of the company to her niece.
  • He bequeathed power to his third wife Isabel, but she was overthrown by another military coup in 1976.
  • But the picture has heft and power, fuelled by Russell's despair and self-loathing at the legacy of hate bequeathed to him by his father and grandfather: both cops.
  • He bequeathed his entire estate to his daughter.
  • Parents bequeath property to their children in equal shares.
  • He was a liberal benefactor to many public institutions, and bequeathed some of his estate to the University of Oxford.
  • It fittingly perpetuates his memory as one who lived an unassuming honourable life and bequeathed the whole of his residuary estate to charity.
  • There is some diversity of outlook in the societies: some emphasize cremation; others are more interested in educational programs advocating bequeathal of bodies to medical schools; still others stress freedom of choice in the matter of burials as their main concern. The Undertaker's Racket
  • All belong to the Courtauld, including nine recently bequeathed. Times, Sunday Times
  • He had designed the first chemist shops, and died bequeathing his widow and three daughters some valuable property in Nottingham.
  • He was never what we call unhappy, but full of inward joy, which he bequeathed to his disciples in that sublimest of all prayers, 'that they might have his joy fulfilled in themselves.' The Continental Monthly, Vol. 6, No. 6, December 1864 Devoted To Literature And National Policy
  • A Terrell museum wing was bequeathed and installed in the 1950s.
  • The things people accumulated -- old pictures and pewter, jade and carved ivory and ugly-faced masks and books and tapestries and large yellow sperm-whale teeth scored with scrimshaw, silver platters and spoons and sugar tongs, the incidental and ill-assorted objects that were supposed to have value -- all of it was merely borrowed from the vast store of the world's artifacts and ultimately returned to it, sold, bequeathed, lost, stolen. Beard
  • But when he dies he is to bequeath what is left in the manner agreed upon.
  • All belong to the Courtauld, including nine recently bequeathed. Times, Sunday Times
  • Among the characters is the driver who bequeathed to his family the stubborn speck of coal dust in his eye.
  • In a way, the medical profession bequeathed these techniques to practitioners of folk medicine.
  • Humans who developed a spiritual sense thrived and bequeathed that trait to their offspring.
  • Such is the system of administration bequeathed by the past two decades.
  • And he won't talk about the $4.6 trillion deficit he is bequeathing the nation or about wages.
  • After Goldensohn's death, his widow sold some of his papers and bequeathed the rest to her children.
  • The principle of freedom of testation leaves a person free to choose who should benefit from the estate, and there is nothing to prevent him bequeathing everything to charity.
  • Was this an established practice bequeathed to him by his predecessors when he took the job in 2005? Times, Sunday Times
  • She bequeathed her talent to her daughter.
  • A slave manumitted by a will is not entitled to his peculium unless it is expressly bequeathed to him, though, if the master manumits him in his lifetime, it is enough if it be not expressly taken from him, and to this effect the Emperors Severus and Antoninus have decided by rescript: as also, that a legacy of his peculium to a slave does not carry with it the right to sue for money which he has expended on his master's account, and that a legacy of a peculium may be inferred from directions in a will that a slave is to be free so soon as he has made a statement of his accounts and made up any balance, which may be against him, from his peculium. The Institutes of Justinian
  • Almost penniless, she bequeathed a "few trifling memorials' to friends. PERDITA: The Life of Mary Robinson
  • New laws on mortmain limited the size of donations that might be bequeathed to religious foundations.
  • Donations and bequeathals are welcome and tax deductible.
  • Substantive principles of rationality are always framed in the light of beliefs and ways of life bequeathed by a past that could have turned out otherwise.
  • He is the Giant who most frequently bequeaths nicknames, and he's the most free in bestowing identities too. A Provocateur and a Role Model
  • He bequeathed his books to his pupil, Ayyub Saktiyan, who paid more than ten dirhams as a fare for them being loaded on a camel.
  • Things look especially grim for him when they learn the actress had bequeathed him a ranch property in America worth quite a sum.
  • Eyre Square was originally bequeathed to the people of the city in 1710 by Mayor Edward Eyre.
  • There's something that collectors alone appreciate, about the transitoriness of life, of the fragile miracle of ownership, and of the sense of bequeathing something to posterity.
  • An unknown proportion of the bequests of land in the Bedfordshire wills may refer to property which was devisable by custom: the Bedfordshire testators were not scrupulous about recording the tenure of the property they bequeathed.
  • My aunt bequeathed me all her jewelry
  • If, however, the slave belongs to the heir, who manumits him, Julian says that he is bound, and it is immaterial whether he knew or not that the slave had been bequeathed away from him. The Institutes of Justinian
  • Democracy Interrupted yahooBuzzArticleHeadline = 'Democracy Interrupted'; yahooBuzzArticleSummary = 'Article: Why we as a nation, have been titrated, which is the gradual increasing of dosage, pressure, and propaganda, till the desired effect – an inured and compliant society – have willingly bequeathed away our autonomy of self-government, embraced the genesis of tyranny, and begin our seemingly inexorable march towards dictatorship.' Democracy Interrupted
  • The principle of freedom of testation leaves a person free to choose who should benefit from the estate, and there is nothing to prevent him bequeathing everything to charity.
  • “Apollo and the Muses do not yet intend me to become the prey of the bony scytheman, as I have yet much to do for you, and much to bequeath, which my spirit dictates and calls on me to complete before I depart hence for the Elysian Fields; I feel as if I had written scarcely more than a few notes.” Beethoven A Character Study
  • It was bequeathed this tribal duty by the upheaval in the lands of the Arab-Islamic world [what upheaval? neither Afghanistan nor Iraq were 'upheaving' until we attacked them.] and by the guile and cunning of a generation of jihadists [today's jihadists were yesterday's freedom fighters, I guess it depends on your perspective] and their enablers, who deflected the wrath of their people onto distant American power. Obama's Afghan Struggle
  • Was this an established practice bequeathed to him by his predecessors when he took the job in 2005? Times, Sunday Times
  • And if you're really lucky, it will tell you who they bequeathed their money to. The Sun
  • This is a concept bequeathed by the President, describing how to combine state planning with today's market economics.
  • And if you're really lucky, it will tell you who they bequeathed their money to. The Sun
  • There, with fewest possible sentences, the clergyman announced that he now accepted him and would, therefore, carry out the promise with regard to the bequeathal of his property to him in the event of any untoward circumstances arising later. The Human Chord
  • In village H's development, bequeathal collectivistic ideology affects its developing route, and furthermore, village party committee inherits powerful mobilizing abilities and leads the development.
  • Fortunately, the answer is no, for in the legacy that Tag bequeathed us is a most remarkable piece of technology: the human brain, which remains state-of-the-art. The Time Paradox
  • But history is a hard taskmaster and she has also bequeathed to us all the problems arising from the defeats and betrayals of the socialist revolution in the twentieth century.
  • When the cantankerous old miller dies of a heart attack, he bequeaths his property to his eldest son, his donkey to the second, and the mill cat to his youngest son Mark.
  • But not alone has this Leviathan left his pre-adamite traces in the stereotype plates of nature, and in limestone and marl bequeathed his ancient bust; but upon Egyptian tablets, whose antiquity seems to claim for them an almost fossiliferous character, we find the unmistakable print of his fin. Moby Dick; or the Whale
  • To finalize the transfer of a license, the Liquor Control Board must bequeath its stamp of approval.
  • 14 To prepare their sons for this challenge, Leonardo and Federico each bequeathed a florilegium. Architecture and Memory: The Renaissance Studioli of Federico da Montefeltro
  • The majority of the museum's major collections were donated or bequeathed by individuals.
  • “An odd and interesting bequeathal,” said her dad. The Wish Stealers
  • William's royal robe, adorned with precious gems, and a feretory in the form of an altar, inclosing 300 relics of the saints, were bequeathed by him to the monastery; and Rufus transmitted them to Battle, where they were duly received on the 8th of the calends of November, 1088. Notes and Queries, Number 65, January 25, 1851
  • He was a liberal benefactor to many public institutions, and bequeathed some of his estate to the University of Oxford.
  • It differs from both bequeathal , charity donation, and trust or third person contract, and is a civil act with unique features.
  • In England, ex-offenders could be stripped of their property, denied the right to bequeath or inherit property, and barred from bringing suit or performing other legal functions.
  • The lava-rich soil bequeathed by Etna makes this part of Sicily extremely fertile.
  • She was deposed not by the voters but by the Conservatives to whom she has bequeathed an equivocal legacy. Times, Sunday Times
  • The hierarchical structure of the universe pro - claimed by the leading Neo-Platonists and codified by the Areopagite was bequeathed to the Middle Ages to be “methodized” into a scheme which affected every single aspect of the period's life and thought. HIERARCHY AND ORDER
  • The Khamsa is part of it, complete but for eight folios that had been torn out earlier and were bequeathed to the Met in 1913.
  • My maternal grandfather came from North Wales, and judging by the swarthy skins he bequeathed to his children, the Spaniards from the scattered Spanish Armada had some responsibility there.
  • The one good thing in her life is her tenure as the reigning queen of Lake Charles, Louisiana's Contraband Days festival, an exalted title bequeathed to her by her late mother that entitles her to wear the tiara made by her great-times-four grandfather. Archive 2007-11-01
  • She had bequeathed during her death-illness one third of her property to her uterine sister.
  • He appointed her as his personal representative and bequeathed to her his personal property, consisting of the City Road premises.
  • For he clung to his reputation, to the name bequeathed to him by his ancestors; and if his death awakened any suspicion people's thoughts might be, perhaps, directed toward the mysterious crime, toward the murderer who could not be found, and they would not hesitate to accuse him of the crime. Complete Original Short Stories of Guy De Maupassant
  • It fittingly perpetuates his memory as one who lived an unassuming honourable life and bequeathed the whole of his residuary estate to charity
  • Nestling in a wooded hollow at the edge of the Queen's Balmoral estate on Scotland's Royal Deeside, the whitewashed mansion was bequeathed to Charles by the Queen Mother.
  • Each region bequeaths its own brand of craft skills and the results are so variegated that the categories run into the hundreds.
  • Patrolling the porches of literature, why did they not bequeath us some pandect of their experience, some rich garniture of commentary on the adventures that befell? Shandygaff
  • So I intend to bequeath my property to a charity.
  • AI's practical side continues to thrive, but its theoretical side has languished after bequeathing a mixture of brilliant and awful ideas to philosophy and cognitive psychology.
  • He bequeathed his entire estate to his daughter.
  • The great VERULAM profoundly felt the retardment of his fame; for he has pathetically expressed this sentiment in his testament, where he bequeaths his name to posterity, AFTER SOME GENERATIONS SHALL BE past. Literary Character of Men of Genius Drawn from Their Own Feelings and Confessions
  • I have seen many men strip, in gymnasium and training quarters, men of good blood and upbringing, but I have never seen one who stripped to better advantage than this young sot of two-and-twenty, this young god doomed to rack and ruin in four or five short years, and to pass hence without posterity to receive the splendid heritage it was his to bequeath. A MAN AND THE ABYSS
  • * 'I give and bequeath to my bister Botty the sum of 90/. at my dejith, iind Forty more at the birth of her tirst child. Literary Anecdotes of the Eighteenth Century: Comprising Biographical Memoirs of William Bowyer ...
  • Flexibility is nothing to bequeath," he mutters into his armpit more escape from trunk Of Midwest Contortionists In Extremis
  • Take, for instance, the case of a person at the age of Thirty, who, by the payment of 5_l. _ 3s. 4d. to the Britannia Life Assurance Company, can become at once possessed of a bequeathable property, amounting to The Economist Volume 1, No. 3
  • In Nomad I try to describe how, in the most intimate sphere of family, my father and mother related or failed to relate to one another; the expectations they had of their children; their philosophy of parenting; the identity crisis they bequeathed to their children; their conflicted views toward sexuality, money, and violence; and above all, the role of religion in misshaping our family life. Nomad
  • I have seen many men strip, in gymnasium and training quarters, men of good blood and upbringing, but I have never seen one who stripped to better advantage than this young sot of two-and-twenty, this young god doomed to rack and ruin in four or five short years, and to pass hence without posterity to receive the splendid heritage it was his to bequeath. A MAN AND THE ABYSS
  • He bequeathed all his silver to his children.
  • Her errant father bequeathed little to his daughter. Times, Sunday Times
  • So much for bequeathing your ‘personal account’ to your kids in the event of your untimely demise.
  • Traditionally, not only property is bequeathed, but social and political position as well.
  • Such properties can also be legally bequeathed without capital gains tax.
  • It was the richest legacy he could possibly have bequeathed to his people.
  • Most of them are from his estate which was bequeathed by his heirs to the State Russian Museum in today's St. Petersburg.
  • I bequeath three-fiftieths thereof to my niece Louisa, daughter of my brother Amos.
  • The letter was bequeathed to the museum by a collector.
  • Most people bequeath their property to their spouses and children.
  • By not adequately working to build a political database, he bequeathed no organizational capacity to those who might come after him.
  • Some couples pledged to bequeath a portion of their estates, however modest, to an adopted son or daughter.
  • As they provided in their will as they bequeathed it in trust and confirmed it under oath, so on their terms I hold it. Christianity Today
  • She was the natural daughter of a financial adventurer who bequeathed her his fortune.
  • Britain and the North's inheritance tax thresholds are far less generous than Irish rates, and many beneficiaries in the Republic could end up paying the higher rate on property bequeathed to them.
  • The person to whom I previously bequeathed my entire estate, the woman with the enormous mammaries, apparently cannot be located, so I will have to designate new heirs.
  • And that he bequeathed his carp pond to the local Boy Scouts?
  • So I guess even if it took me three years to finally shake off my irrational fear of ecclesiastical authority, my inerudite lips still pay homage to the power of the institutionally bequeathed title, eh, Dr. W? I Think I Was Just Informed of My Pending Excommunication. | Mind on Fire
  • She bequeathed all her property equally among her children.
  • Imperial powers bequeathed the nation-state system to their colonies, but it has not worked well in either part of the world.
  • Humans, like all mammals, bequeath what they can to their offspring in two forms: natural and cultural, or genetic and nongenetic. Bringhurst on Books: as basic to humans as nests are to Birds
  • Her father bequeathed her the family fortune in his will.
  • Going underground, he reclaims this haunted, burrowed space of the city as a legacy bequeathed to him by his grandfather, one of the sandhogs who dug the tunnels of the New York subway, and reinvents himself as Treefrog.
  • And lastly, (for there is no end of enumerating every particular of his glory,) with one word bequeath all this power and splendor to his posterity? The History of England in Three Volumes, Vol.I., Part E. From Charles I. to Cromwell

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