inheritable in English

adjective
1
capable of being inherited.
these characteristics are inheritable
adjective

Use "inheritable" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "inheritable" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "inheritable", or refer to the context using the word "inheritable" in the English Dictionary.

1. It is inheritable, usually by the eldest son although a few Baronetcies …

2. Connatural definition: normally existing at birth synonyms: inbred, inborn, native antonyms: adopted, outbred, inheritable, foreign

3. Adaptations are inheritable characteristics that increase an organism's ability to survive and reproduce in an environment

4. The cytological variations observed were inheritable and in some cases both types of abnormalities could be related.

5. There it places the original segment and establishes itself as part of the bacterial cell ' s inheritable mechanism .

6. It is inheritable, usually by the eldest son, although a few Baronetcies can also pass through the female line.··baronet

7. Cataracts are an inheritable trait, so if a dog is one of the breeds known for Cataracts, there is a good chance they might develop them

8. ‘The proper law governing the transfer of Corporeal movable property is the lex situs.’ ‘Having defined hereditaments as inheritable interests, the common law went on to distinguish between Corporeal and inCorporeal hereditaments.’

9. Ancestral - inherited or inheritable by established rules (usually legal rules) of descent; "Ancestral home"; "Ancestral lore"; "hereditary monarchy"; "patrimonial estate"; "transmissible tradition" patrimonial , hereditary , transmissible

10. A medieval fortified group of houses (as in Great Britain) forming a town with special duties and privileges, having in its later form its own courts, the right of Burgherhood inheritable, representatives in the national council or parliament, and holding a charter from the king

11. In inheritance: Limits on freedom of testation …the widower was entitled to Curtesy, a life rent in his wife’s heritage (i.e., immovable) property, and the widow had the right of terce—i.e., a life rent out of one-third of her husband’s inheritable estate.

12. As nouns the difference between Baronet and Baron is that Baronet is a hereditary title, below a peerage and senior to most knighthoods, entitling the bearer to the titular prefix "sir" (for men) or "dame" (for women) which is used in conjunction with the holder's christian name it is inheritable, usually by the eldest son

13. Fee Simple fee simple n pl: fees simple [simple without limitation (as to heirs) and unrestricted (as to transfer of ownership)]: a fee that is Alienable (as by deed, will, or intestacy) and of potentially indefinite duration ;esp: fee simple absolute in this entry fee simple absolute: a fee that is freely inheritable and Alienable without any limitations or restrictions on transfers and that