inheritance Meaning, Definition & Usage

  1. noun hereditary succession to a title or an office or property
    heritage.
  2. noun that which is inherited; a title or property or estate that passes by law to the heir on the death of the owner
    heritage.
  3. noun (genetics) attributes acquired via biological heredity from the parents
    hereditary pattern.
  4. noun any attribute or immaterial possession that is inherited from ancestors
    heritage.
    • my only inheritance was my mother's blessing
    • the world's heritage of knowledge

WordNet


In*her"it*ance noun
Etymology
Cf. OF. enheritance.
Definitions
  1. The act or state of inheriting; as, the inheritance of an estate; the inheritance of mental or physical qualities.
  2. That which is or may be inherited; that which is derived by an heir from an ancestor or other person; a heritage; a possession which passes by descent.
    When the man dies, let the inheritance Descend unto the daughter. Shak.
  3. A permanent or valuable possession or blessing, esp. one received by gift or without purchase; a benefaction.
    To an inheritance incorruptible, and undefiled, and that fadeth not away. 1 Pet. i. 4.
  4. Possession; ownership; acquisition. "The inheritance of their loves." Shak.
    To you th' inheritance belongs by right Of brother's praise; to you eke longs his love. Spenser.
  5. (Biol.) Transmission and reception by animal or plant generation.
  6. (Law) A perpetual or continuing right which a man and his heirs have to an estate; an estate which a man has by descent as heir to another, or which he may transmit to another as his heir; an estate derived from an ancestor to an heir in course of law. Blackstone. ✍ The word inheritance (used simply) is mostly confined to the title to land and tenements by a descent. Mozley & W.
    Men are not proprietors of what they have, merely for themselves; their children have a title to part of it which comes to be wholly theirs when death has put an end to their parents' use of it; and this we call inheritance. Locke.

Webster 1913