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"bequeath" Definitions
  1. to say in a will that you want somebody to have your property, money, etc. after you die synonym leave
  2. bequeath something (to somebody) | bequeath somebody something to leave the results of your work, knowledge, etc. for other people to use or deal with, especially after you have died

118 Sentences With "bequeath"

How to use bequeath in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "bequeath" and check conjugation/comparative form for "bequeath". Mastering all the usages of "bequeath" from sentence examples published by news publications.

This is the country I bequeath to you, the country I bequeath you to.
Make sure the inheritance you're poised to bequeath remains intact.
He hoped to bequeath to his son an American future.
It feels wrong to knowingly bequeath a disease to anyone.
Mr Cameron wants to bequeath his party a long lease.
Whoever succeeds him, Mr Karimov will bequeath a troubled legacy.
You never sold them and bequeath them to your children.
That's a lot of cash to bequeath to a teenager.
Make sure that inheritance you're poised to bequeath remains intact.
So I'll bequeath the booking to whomever might beat me out.
Let's not bequeath to another generation of women an unequal playing ground.
"You do start to think about the world that you want to bequeath."
What he ultimately decides to bequeath to his successor remains to be seen.
Some, like the ancient Egyptians', last thousands of years and bequeath to posterity tremendous monuments.
"If you bequeath all three to your people, their love for you will never die."
"It's such a difficult decision whether to donate," Schomisch said of people who bequeath their bodies.
Adam and Eve bequeath to their descendants something even more vital than their seed: their example.
But he has one asset he can freely bequeath to his favorite daughter, Elizabeth: his wit.
And unless something dramatic changes, he will bequeath the North Korean nuclear headache to the next president.
For older Americans who plan to bequeath shares to spouses or heirs, an inversion is especially costly.
The 14th amendment, in guaranteeing citizenship, was mean to restore and bequeath family integrity to African-Americans.
Similar to property rights, under the right of publicity, you can assign, license, or sometimes bequeath your likeness.
Americans who pass away in 2016 can bequeath $5.45 million to heirs free of the federal estate tax.
She has declined several offers to sell her entire stock and plans to bequeath the collection to her son.
Finally, a man and a woman on the street bequeath the cab they have flagged down to Team Mago.
This tiny house could bequeath big ideas about the importance of sustainability in building an equitable and just society.
Suzuki has donated many of his artifacts to the Hall and has pledged to eventually bequeath his entire collection.
Apart from better public transport, the Olympics may bequeath an overdue revival of Rio's decayed and crime-ridden historic centre.
LONDON (Reuters Breakingviews) - BMW Chief Executive Harald Krueger will bequeath a well-oiled machine when he steps down next year.
"We bequeath to you the ardent love for the great leader of the working class Vladimir Lenin," the letter says.
Mr Trump will not bequeath a set of political ideas as Reagan did those he had inherited from Goldwater and others.
You secretly think Your Mum's Rich Friend might take an unearned shine to you and bequeath you a house or something.
None of them can bequeath refugee status—and the material, financial and diplomatic support that comes with it—to future generations.
By increasing the estate tax's exemption, the bill reduces those people's incentive to bequeath their estate to charities, churches, universities, etc.
Were Elizabeth to name her grandson William as king, she would bequeath a huge challenge to a man who seems quite shy.
Teachers had been accustomed to jobs for life, and the right to sell their posts or bequeath them to their children upon retirement.
As Munch was working on this painting, he was also preparing his will, which would bequeath his estate to the city of Oslo.
For instance, if you bequeath your individual retirement account outright to the individual, government assistance might be suspended until the situation is rectified.
They are more likely to set up charitable foundations than people with children, and much more likely to bequeath money to good causes.
Death and relationships are messy, and more often than not there aren't pointed last words or a chance to bequeath a personal treasure.
People without children are far more likely to bequeath money to charity, points out Russell James, an expert on philanthropy at Texas Tech University.
It's more like an economy where every time you needed gold, you had to wait for someone to donate or bequeath it to you.
Richard wants to bequeath the world a free, efficient, self-learning compression platform and collect his billions with premium services on the back end.
In the Netherlands and much of Europe, people who bequeath their bodies to research do so as a charitable donation, with no payment involved.
Jon Huntsman are interested in running if Hatch retires, and Hatch has said if he leaves he'd like to bequeath the seat to Romney.
If the machine is the only thing we as adults will be able to bequeath the next generation, we will have lost the children.
Pets, however, are regarded as property, and people are not typically allowed to bequeath property to other property—leaving a dishwasher to the sink, say.
It is depressing to explain to our children that what we confronted as children may be the legacy they bequeath to their children as well.
In sum, the EPA's plan would bequeath America vehicles that guzzle more gas, have higher fuel costs, produce more pollution, and profit the dirtiest automakers.
This seeks HIV-positive volunteers who are terminally ill for some other reason and asks them to bequeath their tissues for cryogenic preservation and subsequent study.
Just as the 1964 Tokyo Olympics left a legacy of widely used bullet trains, the 2020 Games would bequeath hydrogen infrastructure for future generations, former Gov.
"If a couple wishes to bequeath $100,000 to each child, conversions may make sense because a Roth is the best way to gift," said Ms. Gugle.
It's less clear why we ought to fear alien blueprints from another galaxy, yet embrace the ones we're about to bequeath to our descendants (if any).
But now that he has broached the subject of elected succession with Daenerys, it's entirely possible she will turn around and bequeath the throne to him.
They satisfy our narrative needs, resembling the long-lost relatives in Victorian novels who bequeath their fortunes to our heroes and heroines, making their lives bearable.
"They are supposed to bequeath it when they die — and they don't die," said Helen Kijo-Bisimba, executive director of Tanzania's Legal and Human Rights Centre (LHRC).
He led the organization for two decades and told friends and relatives he intended to bequeath his money to it, Ms. Mann said in her court papers.
Appealing to older voters, many of whom tend to favor leaving Europe, Mr. Cameron urged them to think about what they would bequeath to the next generation.
But it gives me a certain dubious pleasure to bequeath to Gatwick, an airport I have known and disliked for many years, this year's Jon of Jons.
The lesson there surely will be taken into account if and when the Democrats return to power, and Republicans bequeath them a private insurance market in shambles.
However traditional slavery, in which humans are treated as chattels, and bequeath their status to their children, does still exist, even though all countries have abolished it.
And either women over the age of consent have sexual agency or we're handing back every hard-won advance that previous generations of feminists struggled to bequeath us.
This letter also made it clear that he intended to bequeath his apartment and everything within it, including the material related to his unfinished book, to Mr. Defert.
The new law means that, along with their accumulated wealth, those who bequeath substantial IRAs to their adult children now may be leaving them a huge tax burden.
If Trump were to sign an executive order preventing creditors from attaching Venezuela's assets, that would be by far the greatest gift he could bequeath a fledgling Guaidó administration.
We are now in a society in which the childish desires of a reality-TV narcissist can insult the inheritance that Washington and Hamilton risked their lives to bequeath.
For example, investors who buy an annuity generally can't bequeath as large of an estate at death, since the insurance company often doesn't pay out remaining assets to heirs.
His parting shot to the House of Commons after more than six decades on its benches was to bequeath to his successors the necessity of reforming the House of Lords.
He is something of a fiscal conservative, cutting spending and raising taxes, and will bequeath his state both a budget surplus and a full rainy-day fund when he goes.
In less than a year, the president will bequeath this policy, and the sweeping legal claims that underlie it, to someone who may see the world very differently from him.
At the annual meeting of the club's shareholders, he talked about how he wanted to bequeath a team primed for immediate, continuing success, one in ruder health than ever before.
Jonny Ive's design group could bequeath to them a sketch of a distinctive-looking desktop computer tower if they felt like it, but could also not bother if they don't care.
You could continue to live in it, bequeath it to a loved one in your will, rent it out or sell it at whatever price a buyer is willing to pay.
Trump's difficulty in negotiating the transition between descriptions of "American carnage," and a great America he will bequeath to the people tells a great deal about the challenges ahead for this president.
There is talk of education reform in a vague 20-year plan which the junta has promised to bequeath to the nation, and which future elected governments will be constitutionally bound to follow.
The 83-year-old novelist, who used the library as a student and later researched his monumental "American Trilogy" in one of its reference rooms, plans to bequeath his personal library to it.
But a Kashmiri man who is a permanent resident can own property and bequeath his property to his children even if he is married to a woman who is not a permanent resident.
In 1975 she promised to bequeath two works that she kept with her for the rest of her life pointedly not to the Met but to the National Gallery of Art in Washington.
In addition, rich folk planning to bequeath much of their wealth to charity would have an incentive to accelerate that giving during their lives, shrinking the wealth base subject to the Warren tax.
A: If you owned a house or a condominium, you could bequeath the property to your daughter and she could do with it as she pleased — move in, rent it or sell it.
Without proper preparation, those kinds of situations could snarl your estate plan, potentially reducing the value of assets you bequeath or putting them in the hands of people you never intended to receive them.
The one issue on which Mr. Sisi has proved vulnerable is his decision to bequeath two Red Sea islands, Tiran and Sanafir, to Saudi Arabia during a visit by the Saudi king last year.
Mr. Greenfield was also following Mr. Hikind's playbook: The assemblyman used a similar maneuver a year ago to bequeath to a favored young ally a local "district leader" post he held at the time.
And while the idea that the electors should exercise independent judgment quickly became discredited, the Electoral College remained to potentially bequeath the White House to a candidate who is not the choice of the people.
But it would be folly to predict that Trump will not bequeath a spirit of contempt and obstruction that others—including Breitbart Media and members of the House Freedom Caucus—will insist on carrying forth.
But until governments wake alongside them, progress on climate change will remain woefully insufficient, the difficult work will be further delayed, and the mess we bequeath our children will grow ever larger and more expensive.
The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act also nearly doubled the amount that decedents could bequeath in death — or gift over their lifetime — and shield from federal estate and gift taxes, which kick in at 40 percent.
And we've seen, in recent years, what sharply drawn lines and perpetual warfare between the parties bequeath: legislative paralysis, debased discourse and the precise public disgust with politics and politicians that has given rise to Trump.
On one hand, Britain (unlike France) allows people to bequeath their property to anybody they choose, and if they choose to make a will on Islamic principles that is formally speaking a free exercise of this entitlement.
"I will eventually bequeath my Yes Bank promoter shares to my 3 daughters and subsequently to their children, with a request in my will stating not to sell a single share...," Kapoor tweeted from his verified Twitter account.
His valedictory Asia tour, which moved on to Laos later in the day, is unfolding amid diplomatic slights and great power rivalries that reflect the unstable nature of the world Obama will bequeath to his successor in January.
Unfortunately, by the time the climate-denying GOP leaders retire or die out and bequeath the party to the Young Conservatives for Carbon Dividends, it will already be much too late to meet any United Nations emissions goals.
First of all, the artist has to bequeath not only the physical piece of art but also the copyright to her heir in the will (which an artist would need to do no matter what state she lives in).
Juncker's goal, people familiar with his thinking say, is to heal an east-west rift before he steps down in 18 months and to bequeath a Union that is reshaping itself after losing one of its Big Three powers.
If the British made use of the freely available local juniper berries to bequeath the taste for gin, it is South Africa's young entrepreneurs who are exploiting the unique vegetation of the shrub- and heathland of the coastal Cape.
So it's no wonder that Vogue is already taking note of this style superstar in the making, breaking from their usual roster of old guard Hollywood celebs and Instagram It-girls to bequeath the title of July cover girl on Zendaya.
Ms. Antognini said that her foundation, the Fondazione Pasquinelli — which she founded in 2011 after the death of her husband, the collector Francesco Pasquinelli — would also hire an expert to examine the painting, which she intends to bequeath to an institution.
Good news for people sitting on millions: The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act nearly doubled the amount that decedents can bequeath in death — or gift over their lifetime — and shield it from federal estate and gift taxes, which are 40%.
Rogers's achievement was the culmination of an arduous process that had begun back in 2005, when one of his aides suggested to local community members that the best way to improve the county's prospects was to bequeath it a prison.
By acting upon this request from Beaufort, President Obama can bequeath to the nation a site where Americans can contemplate how the Civil War and the destruction of slavery changed the nation — and the long struggle for equal rights that followed.
And if, as Hazel smugly insists, you must "leave a place cleaner than you found it," what does that mean about the earth we bequeath to our children, blotched as it is with our awful mistakes and overrun with centenarian yoginis?
The people who make the decision to bequeath their bodies to medical institutions do so without ever meeting or knowing those of us who will be handling them, learning their nooks and crannies in a way that even their loved ones did not.
Trump and his two eldest children each have dependents; Trump stands to bequeath all of his children vast inheritances; and Trump and his family would likely also benefit from the kind of regulatory regime he and the GOP leadership is committed to creating.
LONDON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - "Whatever it takes" is a daunting legacy for any departing central bank chief to bequeath a successor and leaves world markets anxious about what is to come after Mario Draghi leaves the European Central Bank later this year.
Good news for people sitting on millions of dollars: The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act nearly doubled the amount that decedents can bequeath in death — or gift over their lifetime — and shield it from federal estate and gift taxes, which are 40%.
Instead of probating their wills, black property owners tended to bequeath their property to descendants in the form of undivided shares — an arrangement under which heirs become co-owners of a property, each with the right to sell his or her own interest.
Mr Obama will certainly bequeath his successor something else: a way of waging war crafted to avoid provoking American public opinion, while making the best use of narrowly-applied American firepower (Mr Carter, a physicist by training, likes to talk of using America's strengths as "accelerants").
By advancing a supply-side tax reform that would allow him to bequeath his estate to his children tax-free, Trump has surrendered his claim to populism, and left himself vulnerable to criticism from Hillary Clinton, who proposes a more genuinely populist tax increase on rich people.
Where to watch: Netflix Lily's estranged father shows up and ruins her Thanksgiving, but Marshall has a plan: To bequeath a slap (don't ask, just watch) to Ted and Robin, and as they struggle to figure out who will hit Barney, the Slap brings everyone together.
It is clear that Mexico has no plans to generously bequeath the wall to the United States, and any actions that the United States takes to induce Mexico to pay — such as levying a 20 percent tax on imports from Mexico — will involve costs to U.S. citizens.
For her installation, "Elevated," she dived into the past – specifically the past that was supposed to bequeath New York the Second Avenue subway generations ago, and that led her to the idea of illustrating the demolition of the Second Avenue and Third Avenue elevated lines in the 1940s and 1950s.
Hardly a world-historical event, but the boy was named Augustine, and he went on to shape Christian theology for both Roman Catholics and Protestants, to explore the hidden recesses of the inner life, and to bequeath to all of us the conviction that there is something fundamentally damaged about the entire human species.
Lolling on the couch, huge with twins, I indulged in binges of nostalgia for all those a-minus-list parties I hit in Manhattan with all my then-single girlfriends, wearing a razzle-dazzle wardrobe I would finally bequeath to my skinniest neighbor once I realized those pre-pregnancy days were never coming back.
" Asked why he decided to build his own museum rather than to bequeath his collection to a public museum, or build a new wing onto an existing institution, Mr. van Caldenborgh said, "Nobody offered me that, number one, and number two, I would've been afraid that everything would go into the vaults and never appear again.
At his news conference Tuesday afternoon, Meyer cited the excellent status he would be leaving the program in; the ability to bequeath it to a respected assistant, and health issues, chiefly headaches stemming from a brain cyst that he has dealt with for years but that began to flare up anew more than a year ago.
"Twenty years before he died, when he decided to bequeath all his works to the French state, Willy started going through every single one of the 20053,000 or so pictures he took since the early '30s, and chose 590 of them as his visual testament," Jean-Claude Gautrand, another close friend of Ronis, explained in an interview.
The definition that obtains among our current economy's ruling superclass—the chill California billionaires who lend each other money and spend their days in endless informational interviews and periodically bequeath disruptions to those of us below—has little to do with actually telling a story, and much more to do with the metastatic grandiosity of how that community explains its success to itself.
There is Michele, a dabbling painter who has run away from Italy to England, possibly to escape arrest for his political links; there is Michele's father, a professional painter, dying of a stomach ulcer, keen to bequeath a tower he bought in the countryside to his wayward son; there is Michele's friend, Osvaldo, who spends his days running a bookshop and running errands for Michele in Rome.

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