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inherit verb [ ɪnˈhɛrɪt ]

• receive (money, property, or a title) as an heir at the death of the previous holder.
• "she inherited a fortune from her father"
Similar: become heir to, fall heir to, come into/by, be bequeathed, be left, be willed, be devised,
• derive (a quality, characteristic, or predisposition) genetically from one's parents or ancestors.
• receive or be left with (a situation, object, etc.) from a predecessor or former owner.
• "spending commitments inherited from previous governments"
Similar: succeed to, accede to, assume, take over, come into, be elevated to, have conferred on one,
Origin: Middle English enherite ‘receive as a right’, from Old French enheriter, from late Latin inhereditare ‘appoint as heir’, from Latin in- ‘in’ + heres, hered- ‘heir’.


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