Patrimony in a sentence as a noun

Shills and the actual desire to conserve one's patrimony.

They may have even been at some point property of the state and as such could be treated as national patrimony.

It's quite obvious that caste and lineage are immanent within much of our cultural patrimony.

So you mean that I could acheive Genghis Khan-like levels of genetic patrimony just by becoming a sperm donor?It's tempting.

Saudi wealth is seeking to diversify, so its using its patrimony to seek alternative income streams to oil.

Their entitlement to some kind of imagined cultural patrimony is such an obvious historical fiction.

The text of the article currently seems to talk about Colombia's “national cultural patrimony” -- I couldn't find much about Spain; was it edited?

I mean, you don't think in Columbia, or Ukraine or the Philippines you'll read much American authors, musicians, scholars, scientists, inventors, actors, etc., other than those part of the global patrimony?

If anything Americans are criticized for over-emphasizing their "Americanism".I think the OP mean more along the line of patrimony and culture that is common in the Old World.

What about an option to be crawled by the Archive Team?I'm glad your committing to be around for forever, but a worst-case plan is absolutely necessary to trust you with my family's patrimony, etc.

If the government decides that your lemonade stand is a danger to public health, or that your stamp collection is a national patrimony and cannot leave the country, it will make new laws that enforce those decisions.

> "The ineffable truth of this case is that the Mercedes is a naval vessel of Spain and that the wreck of this naval vessel, the vessel's cargo, and any human remains are the natural and legal patrimony of Spain.

“It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understanding it.”― Upton Sinclair“Men sooner forget the death of their father than the loss of their patrimony”― Niccolò Machiavelli

The patrimony of a poor man lies in the strength and dexterity of his hands; and to hinder him from employing this strength and dexterity of his hands; and to hinder him from employing this strength and dexterity in what manner he thinks proper without injury to his neighbour is a plain violation of this most sacred property.

This is what the law says:"Acts of the President against the Constitution, and, especially, against the guard and legal use of public money".The definition of "against the guard and legal use of public money" is given as, among other things,"neglect the collection of rents, taxes and fees, as well as the conservation of national patrimony.

!What has being an Indian citizen got to do with the truth?I write what I write so that the rah-rah-yay-yay idiots like you could draw their attention to the real problem in your country -- a civilization more than 10,000 years old that still cannot fix basic sanitation issues, where women are raped on a regular no-comment basis, where corruption is prevalent from birth-certificate to death-certificates, where swathes of your population are being driven to Naxal violence by the state as a means of defending their homes, culture and patrimony from greedy corporations.

Patrimony definitions

noun

a church endowment

noun

an inheritance coming by right of birth (especially by primogeniture)

See also: birthright