hereditary

பரம்பரை
definition
adjective
members of the ancient Polish aristocracy who had hereditary right to elect the king
(of a title, office, or right) conferred by or based on inheritance.
translation of 'hereditary'
பெற்றோரிடம் இருந்து குழந்தைகளுக்கு வருகிற
example
Because pernicious anemia can be 'hereditary' , let your doctor know if you have a relative with the disorder so that he or she can test your blood every few years.
From 1133 the office was 'hereditary' in the de Vere family, though with interruptions and vicissitudes, until it passed in 1626 to their cousins the Berties, as Lords Willoughby de Eresby.
But acclamation did not rule out the possibility of 'hereditary' or even dynastic successions.
The governors of the regions of Egypt gained 'hereditary' claim to their offices and subsequently their families acquired large estates.
Human trials of gene-based therapies aimed at both macular degeneration and 'hereditary' blindness are set to begin in the U.K. perhaps as early as next year.
The passing on of property or titles is also 'hereditary' and through the eldest male child of the family.
According to Mendel, the 'hereditary' elements were like particles, and took two forms - dominant and recessive.
Richard lasted only two years before he was deposed by Henry Tudor, a relation to the House of Lancaster but with no realistic 'hereditary' claim to the throne.
An Austrian monk, Gregor Mendel, introduced the world to hereditary factors - genes - that determine all 'hereditary' traits.
Belonging to the Japanese samurai class was a 'hereditary' membership.
The people were governed by 'hereditary' princes called Sao-Phas who ruled in as many as forty different principalities.
With the recent abolition of the 'hereditary' element of the House of Lords by New Labour, many of those kind of instinctive assumptions have simply disappeared.
In principle, 'hereditary' succession is rejected by the juristic tradition.
'hereditary' disease
From the perspective of later developments, the Enlightened Despotism of the eighteenth century seems like a last-ditch attempt to match the personal rule of 'hereditary' princes to the needs of the modern state.
Yoritomo took the title of shogun, which had been a temporary commission from the emperor, and made it a permanent 'hereditary' office.
Cambodia's royal succession is not 'hereditary' , and King Sihanouk has no power to appoint a successor, but he can influence the decision of the Throne Council.
The original constitution restricted the right to vote by property but outlawed 'hereditary' titles and added trial by jury in criminal cases.
These were members of the royal family whose dynasties became 'hereditary' while their traditional districts were clearly defined by boundaries and Bemba names.
The President of the United States would be an officer elected by the people for four years; the king of Great Britain is a perpetual and 'hereditary' prince.
The 'hereditary' elements proposed by Darwin were more physical - and therein lay their downfall.
They extend their speculations, even forecasting that, by genetic manipulation, they will be able to cure 'hereditary' diseases and defects and, possibly, make a race having superior bodies and intellects.
Ironically Arnold himself liked to express the occasional dislike of 'hereditary' honours and titles.
Koité, from Northwestern Mali, is a member of the 'hereditary' Mande caste of musicians and craftsmen known as jalis.
It belongs to the 'hereditary' Queen of the Faeries Anna Marpessa, but I expect you have met her already.
Being the president's son may have done more harm than good for Gamal Mubarak, since the notion of his becoming president is linked to the much-maligned concept of 'hereditary' succession.
Perhaps in this predicament, Edgeworth acknowledges the 'hereditary' rights of the native Irish and the barriers that a lack of education has placed between them and those rights.
By this time Plana was astronomer royal, and he went on to become a 'hereditary' baron in 1844 and a senator in 1848.
'hereditary' right
Haida Nation president Guujaaw handed the writ to Haida runners in a highly charged formal ceremony, with instructions to take their claim of 'hereditary' title to the B.C. Supreme Court.
Credits: Google Translate