SON vs HEIR: NOUN
- A male child, a boy or man in relation to his parents; one's male offspring.
- See School of the prophets, under Prophet.
- Jesus Christ, the Savior; -- called the Son of God, and the Son of man.
- The produce of anything.
- A native or inhabitant of some specified place.
- Any young male person spoken of as a child; an adopted male child; a pupil, ward, or any other young male dependent.
- A male child; the male issue, or offspring, of a parent, father or mother.
- One of the secret associations, similar to the Knights of the Golden Circle, formed in the North during the civil war, for the purpose of giving aid to the Confederacy.
- In the years preceding the revolution, one of associations formed to forward the American cause.
- In the New Testament, Christ as the promised Messiah.
- One of Christ's followers; one of the regenerate.
- A male adopted person in relation to his adoption parents.
- A person or thing born or produced, in relation to the producing soil, country, or the like.
- One adopted into a family; any young male dependent; any person in whom the relation of a son to a parent is perceived or imagined.
- A male descendant, however distant; hence, in the plural, descendants in general.
- A male child; the male issue of a parent, father or mother.
- An original spelling of sound.
- A form of the termination -tion, in some words derived through Old French, as in benison, malison, venison, reason, season, treason, etc. See -tion.
- The second person of the Trinity.
- Used as a familiar form of address for a young man.
- One personified or regarded as a male descendant.
- A man considered as if in a relationship of child to parent.
- A male descendant.
- One's male child.
- A male human offspring
- A person whose character partakes so much of some quality or characteristic as to suggest the relationship of son and parent: as, sons of light; sons of pride; the son of perdition.
- A male person who has such a close relationship with an older or otherwise more authoritative person that he can be regarded as a son of the other person.
- A friendly address to a person of equal authority.
- A familiar address to a male person from an older or otherwise more authoritative person.
- A male person considered to have been significantly shaped by some external influence.
- The divine word of God; the second person in the Trinity (incarnate in Jesus)
- A successor in a role, representing continuity with the predecessor.
- One who inherits, or has been designated to inherit, a hereditary title or office.
- Someone who inherits, or is designated to inherit, the property of another (Wikipedia).
- One who, if the ancestor should die immediately, would be his heir, but whose right to the inheritance may be defeated by the birth of a nearer relative, or by some other contingency.
- One who, after his ancector's death, has a right to inherit all his intestate estate.
- See under Apparent.
- One who receives any endowment from an ancestor or relation.
- One who inherits, or is entitled to succeed to the possession of, any property after the death of its owner; one on whom the law bestows the title or property of another at the death of the latter.
- A child regarded with reference to anything due to his parentage; an offspring in general.
- One who inherits anything; one who receives any endowment by inheritance or transmission.
- In another extended sense, one in a series of heirs; any successive inheritor, including not only him who takes immediately upon the death of the ancestor, but also those who have inherited through several successive descents, In the most general sense, the person upon whom property of any kind devolves on the death of another, either by law or by will. Thus, the children of a person deceased are popularly spoken of as his heirs, irrespective of the nature of the property or the mode in which it passed. In much this sense heres was used in the Roman law.
- Technically, in law, the person upon whom the law casts an estate in real property immediately on the death of the ancestor, as distinguished from one who takes by will as a legatee or devisee, and from one who succeeds by law to personal property as next of kin. The same person who is heir when considered with reference to realty is often also next of kin when considered with reference to personalty: and where a testator's will disposes of part only of his realty, the same person who takes under the will as devisee may also take an undisposed-of part as heir. In this sense the word as used at common law does not include a widow on whom the law casts an estate in dower, or a husband on whom the law casts an estate by the courtesy, for these are considered new estates, arising out of marriage and its incidents, and carved out of the fee, not as a continuation or devolution of the fee itself. If there be dower or courtesy, the heir is that person who takes immediate title to the fee, subject to such life-estate. In legal phrase heir and heir at law are commonly used in England in the singular, because the general rule of descent there has given the entire estate to the eldest male. The singular is also not uncommonly used in the United States to designate whoever may be entitled, whether one or more, because of English usage, and because appropriate in all cases where there is but one standing in the nearest degree to the deceased.
- One who inherits, or has a right of inheritance in, the property of another; one who receives, or is entitled to receive, possession of property or a vested right on the death of its owner, either as his natural or as his legal successor.
- Collateral kindred.
- Parents and lawful ascendants;
- Children and lawful descendants;
- One who receives or is expected to receive a heritage, as of ideas, from a predecessor.
- A person who succeeds or is in line to succeed to a hereditary rank, title, or office.
- A person who inherits some title or office
- A person who is entitled by law or by the terms of a will to inherit the estate of another
- In a broader sense, in those jurisdictions where the distinction between realty and personalty is disregarded, the person entitled by law to succeed one dying in respect of either kind of property, as distinguished from those taking by will. In jurisdictions where the distinction is preserved, a testamentary gift of personalty, expressed to be to one's heirs, is commonly understood to intend his next of kin.
SON vs HEIR: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To inherit; to succeed to.
SON vs HEIR: OTHER WORD TYPES
- The divine word of God
- To inherit; succeed to.
SON vs HEIR: RELATED WORDS
- Buddy, Pal, Baby, Child, Children, Stepdaughter, Dad, Mother, Daughter, Brother, Grandson, Logos, Father, Word, Boy
- Legacy, Princesses, Beneficiary, Son, Inherit, Inheritance, Dauphin, Descendant, Prince, Legatee, Heiress, Scion, Heritor, Successor, Inheritor
SON vs HEIR: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Man, Kid, Buddy, Pal, Baby, Child, Children, Stepdaughter, Dad, Mother, Daughter, Brother, Father, Word, Boy
- Covenant, Apparent, Crown, Heritage, Legacy, Princesses, Beneficiary, Son, Inheritance, Dauphin, Descendant, Prince, Legatee, Heiress, Successor
SON vs HEIR: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Scripture could not affirm these things to be true of the Son if the Son were not God.
- Vincent family, in which the father and one son was acquitted of murder but another son was sentenced to hang.
- Talented or not, a son is called a son.
- Son except the Father, and no one knows the Father except the Son and anyone to whom the Son chooses to reveal him.
- Survivors include her daughter Deborah Borgmeyer, son Kevin Gibson, son Keith Gibson and five grandchildren.
- Son of man in the gentleness of a son caring for his bereaved mother.
- It is my universal royalty: Mother of the Son, Queen with the Son.
- The old man had a son, an only son.
- Cast out this slave woman with her son; for the son of this slave woman shall not inherit along with my son Isaac.
- His name was Elkanah son of Jeroham, son of Elihu, son of Tohu, son of Zuph, an Ephraimite.
- If the NCP is the Heir ut executor or administrator on notice for any funds payable to NCP as heir.
- No person is heir until the death of his ancestor, but before that event is generally called the heir apparent.
- Experience the heartache of mothers as they lose son after son, heir after heir.
- Heir finders locate money, real property or other assets for which the owner or heir has not been found.
- Her life would have been in danger because she bore his heir, the heir to the Davidic throne.
- If you have a dynastic heir who is not married, you will get the Unmarried Heir alert.
- Queen Elizabeth II, her heir Prince Charles or the next heir Prince William.
- If I wait until the current heir dies, then my next heir will have missed out on a lot.
- To use an heir index you must determine who the heir is.
- So now he is an heir and a joint heir with you.
SON vs HEIR: QUESTIONS
- What happened to Mighty Sparrow son Sergio Francisco?
- What happened to Alexander and Porus son Malayketu?
- What happened to Nandamuri Harikrishna's son Janakiram?
- What happens in an unhealthy mother-son relationship?
- What happened to Charles Montgomery's son Thaddeus?
- Is Mike Singletary related to Devin singletaries son?
- What is my father's brother's son's son or daughter to me?
- Why is the younger son leaving offensive in the Prodigal Son?
- What happened to Brian Tench's son's son on The Walking Dead?
- Is dwighty Pritchard's son Harvey actually his son?
- How to get legal heir and Survivor member certificate?
- What did prophet Zakariyya say about having an heir?
- Will Charlene Wittstock have to produce a legitimate heir?
- How to get legal heir/succession certificate in Karnataka?
- What are the different types of heir search services?
- Who is Votorantim heir Jose Roberto Ermirio de Moraes?
- Is Lucy Ellmann the literary heir to Virginia Woolf?
- Who is the legitimate heir of Dhritarashtra and Pandu?
- Is Princess Caroline of France an heir presumptive?
- What happens if heir is disqualified from inheriting?