12 example sentences using bequeath.
Bequeath used in a sentence
Bequeath in a sentence as a verb
[10][82] Masters may sell, bequeath, give away, pledge, hire out or compel them to earn money.
I hope whomever South Park Studios does bequeath the rights to the game to will treat it nicely.
Like, I can't bequeath anything to my kids cause that would confer an "unfair" advantage on them?
So poorer families in some cultures bequeath more wealth to women for dowries so they can try to buy their way into higher classes.
Patents are granted to individuals, but those individuals are free to bequeath them to the corporations they are part of.
I would be willing to bet that a 2011 edition of the EB will still be readable by your great-grandchildren but any hard-drives you bequeath them won't.
Trivia, how much more should you have to pay?Currently the basis of the house would step-up to market value when you bequeath it to an heir, so no taxes are due.
If you have any especially nice rugs that you'd like to bequeath to a family member or friend, please make sure you're not standing on them about 3 minutes from now.
If you appreciate Swiss watchmaking and wouldn't mind spending a few thousand bucks on a mechanical timepiece that you can bequeath to your grandchildren some day, you should also look at Jaeger-LeCoultre's Master and Reverso lines.
It's a testament to the power of media that so many people not involved in the military automatically bequeath them with such impenetrable technical capability and diligence.
The OP article said the author article has a Nobel Prize in economics which of course if false, Nobel's bequeath to his prize foundation included Physiology/Medicine, Peace, Chemistry etc. but not economics - after he died people invented an economics prize and stuck Nobel's name on it so to try to give it the allure given to the other prizes.
If you want to leave money to someone it's better to simply invest the cash, then write a will to bequeath your investments to the people of your choice, rather than blow the money on a life insurance premium which -- by deliberate design, to keep the insurance company in business -- is statistically likely to be an additional cost rather than a benefit.