Definition of Disinheritances

1. Noun. (plural of disinheritance) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Disinheritances

1. disinheritance [n] - See also: disinheritance

Lexicographical Neighbors of Disinheritances

disinformative
disinformed
disinformer
disinformers
disinforming
disinforms
disingenuity
disingenuous
disingenuously
disingenuousness
disinhabited
disinherison
disinherisons
disinherit
disinheritance
disinheritances (current term)
disinherited
disinheriting
disinheritor
disinheritors
disinherits
disinhibit
disinhibited
disinhibiting
disinhibition
disinhibitions
disinhibitor
disinhibitors
disinhibitory
disinhibits

Literary usage of Disinheritances

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. United States Supreme Court Reports by Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company, United States Supreme Court (1910)
"... inheritances, partition of lands which were given to rent; and it concludes with the titles appertaining to tutors, disinheritances, legitimate and ..."

2. Reports of Cases Argued and Adjudged in the Supreme Court of the United States by United States Supreme Court, William Cranch, Henry Wheaton, Richard Peters, Benjamin Chew Howard, Jeremiah Sullivan Black (1904)
"... and it concludes with the titles appertaining to tutors, disinheritances, legitimate and illegitimate children, with an appendix to the whole. ..."

3. An Historical Essay on the Magna Charta of King John: To which are Added by Richard Thomson (1829)
"Firstly, the evils and disinheritances which the people of England hnd experienced by becoming their debtors ; and secondly the national sins to which their ..."

4. The Civil Code of Lower Canada: Together with a Synopsis of Changes in the by Thomas McCord, Québec (Province). (1870)
"... effectually excludes him from the succession ; disinheritances have therefore been brought under the same rules as other testamentary dispositions. ..."

5. Japan of the Japanese by Joseph Henry Longford (1914)
"... and residence of each, the names of ancestors and of descendants and their wives and children, adoptions, expulsions, abdications, disinheritances, ..."

6. Semi-serious Observations of an Italian Exile, During His Residence in England by Giuseppe Pecchio (1833)
"Besides the great good of preventing disinheritances, it has the advantage of a better-ordered economy, because all those interested (that is, ..."

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