Inherited in a sentence as an adjective

Half of the list inherited $400 million or more upon turning 18.

The owners of this building didn't assign the value; they inherited it.

" "They all inherited a lot but we inherited nothing.

> New York is pretty impressed by a billion dollars even if you merely inherited it.

'My name is Ryan; I inherited the ship from the previous Dread Pirate Roberts, just as you will inherit it from me.

People like me and Jose, homebred Americans if ya will, are forever tarnished with this inherited title.

But my venture firm recently inherited a stake in Smart Bear, a QA vendor where there are edges of competition.

This was abundantly evident last weekend when I went through a stack of about 100 45s from the 60s and early 70s that I inherited.

The people who inherited the decision of thought leaders of 15 years ago are using it, so the writing is on the wall, its just going to take a while to be read.

It's not that he inherited his wealth, it's that he grew up in a privileged environment that gave him opportunities most other people didn't have.

Mmm. I inherited a rather hardcore strain of liking entirely deterministic builds from being a Debian Developer and would never give up the dependability of it now.

Eschewing trailing prepositions is a rule improperly inherited from Latin.

The author inherited what sounds like a pretty disorganized javascript application and is using it as their real world example for why javascript shouldn't be used to write large web apps.

He wrote:"One of the basic tenets of the Python language has been that code should be simple and clear to express and to read, and Ruby has followed this idea, although not as far as Python has because of the inherited Perlisms.

Mostly what I find in this generation of non-believer is not reflective, self-conscious atheism but rather an inherited, brittle and angry atheism that assumes the final triumph of reductionist materialist science has been accomplished.

Inherited definitions

adjective

occurring among members of a family usually by heredity; "an inherited disease"; "familial traits"; "genetically transmitted features"

See also: familial genetic hereditary transmitted transmissible