The quality of being inheritable or descendible to heirs.
On the contrary, the individual's hold upon his strips developed very rapidly into an inheritable and partible ownership.
I have said nothing about mental peculiarities being inheritable for I reserve this subject for a separate chapter.
In the third chapter the inheritablevariations in the mental phenomena of domestic and of wild organic beings were considered.
But all men know, that they are natural born subjects, and capable of, and inheritable to lands in England.
And whosoever is born within the fee of the king of England, though it be in another kingdom, is a natural born subject, and capable and inheritable of lands in England, as it appeareth in Plow.
England, were capable and inheritable of lands in England.
Davenport of the Department of Experimental Evolution at Cold Spring Harbor (New York) who has carried on so much research in regard to the heredity of epilepsy and other inheritable abnormal conditions, and Dr.
Further, Tschermack, Bateson and others have demonstrated the possibility that hitherto unknown inheritable characters may be produced by hybridisation.
The Darwinian hypothesis of Pangenesis rests on the conception that all inheritable properties are represented in the cells by small invisible particles or gemmules and that these gemmules increase by division.
Defn: The quality of being inheritableor descendible to heirs.
Capable of being inherited; transmissible or descendible; as, an inheritable estate or title.
Law) Defn: The holding or occupation of an inheritable estate which descends from the ancestor to two or more persons; coheirship.
Capable of being transmitted from parent to child; as, inheritable qualities or infirmities.
Inheritable blood, blood or relationship by which a person becomes qualified to be an heir, or to transmit possessions by inheritance.
The eldest daughter of the king is also alone inheritable to the crown on failure of issue male.
In face of these facts it cannot be denied that the modified action of a part produces aninheritable effect--be the nature of that effect what it may.
Is it alleged that the insanity which is inheritable is that which spontaneously arises, and that the insanity which follows some chronic perversion of functions is not inheritable?
The particular complex of inheritable characters which characterizes the individuals of a racial group constitutes the racial temperament.
Through domestication and breeding man has modified the original inheritable traits of plants and animals.
Feeble-mindedness, epilepsy, some forms of insanity, and some venereal diseases are inheritable defects; those who suffer from them must refrain from having children.
Little positive advice can yet be given as to those who are BEST fitted to have children, except in the matter of health and freedom from inheritable defects.
Moreover, for eugenic reasons, we must urge the freeing of wives from husbands who have transmissible diseases, inheritable defects, or chronic alcoholism.
Epilepsy, one symptom of taint, is more or less interchangeable with other defects; the taint, as a whole, is an inheritable unit whose inheritance will appear as any one of many defects.
Variations which may or may not beinheritable do arise spontaneously, we know not how, and by variations all living things evolve.
These chromosomes are supposed to be the bearers of the qualities which we believe can be handed down from plant to plant and from animal to animal, in other words, the inheritable qualities which make the offspring like its parents.
But the number and diversity of inheritabledeviations of structure, both those of slight and those of considerable physiological importance, is endless.
A large amount of inheritable and diversified variability is favourable, but I believe mere individual differences suffice for the work.
We have an inheritable crown, an inheritable peerage, and a House of Commons and a people inheriting privileges, franchises, and liberties from a long line of ancestors.
These sophisters substitute a fictitious cause, and feigned personages, in whose favor they suppose you engaged, whenever you defend the inheritable nature of the crown.
We have an inheritable crown; an inheritable peerage; and a house of commons and a people inheriting privileges, franchises, and liberties, from a long line of ancestors.
So long as we do not know whether acquired modifications are inheritable or not, we are not prepared to elaborate a policy of marriage which can be dogmatically taught or civilly enforced.
According to the current applications of the evolution philosophy it is argued that "inheritable characters peculiar to one sex show a tendency to be inherited chiefly or solely by that sex in the offspring.
When one parent alone displays some newly-acquired and generally inheritable character, and the offspring do not inherit it, the cause may lie in the other parent having the power of prepotent transmission.
The experiments of Vilmorin and Buckman on carrots and parsnips prove that abundant nutriment produces a definite and inheritable effect on the roots, with scarcely any change in other parts of the plant.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "inheritable" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.