bequeath

விட்டுசெல்லவேண்டியுள்ள
definition
verb
an identical sum was bequeathed by Margaret
leave (a personal estate or one's body) to a person or other beneficiary by a will.
translation of 'bequeath'
(மரண)சாசனத்தினால் கொடு
example
But when he dies he is to 'bequeath' what is left in the manner agreed upon.
The individual owner, of course, may in turn sell, give or 'bequeath' his property to any other individual or to the state.
In England, ex-offenders could be stripped of their property, denied the right to 'bequeath' or inherit property, and barred from bringing suit or performing other legal functions.
So I intend to 'bequeath' my property to a charity.
Despite the changes to regulations in this area, many will still find they are forced to use savings or property they hoped to 'bequeath' to family to fund long-term care.
The spiralling costs of the upgrade of the Memorial Baths would appear to jeopardise other worthwhile community projects and 'bequeath' a burden of debt on the city and its ratepayers for many years to come.
Just because they inherited a political and administrative tangle, it shouldn't inevitably follow that they 'bequeath' an environmental disaster.
To finalize the transfer of a license, the Liquor Control Board must 'bequeath' its stamp of approval.
"He wants to 'bequeath' control to his sons, " alleges an insider.
Parents 'bequeath' property to their children in equal shares.
If the executors do not appear, but the claimant can prove by inquest that the testator 'bequeathed' him the tenement, it shall be delivered to him.
Imperial powers 'bequeathed' the nation-state system to their colonies, but it has not worked well in either part of the world.
Substantive principles of rationality are always framed in the light of beliefs and ways of life 'bequeathed' by a past that could have turned out otherwise.
And he won't talk about the $4.6 trillion deficit he is 'bequeathing' the nation or about wages.
The lava-rich soil 'bequeathed' by Etna makes this part of Sicily extremely fertile.
The basic principles of inheritance are equality and the disposal rights of the 'bequeathers' and the heirs.
If the 'bequeather' has no heirs or if no heir accepts the inheritance, the bequeather's tax liability shall be extinguished.
Each region 'bequeaths' its own brand of craft skills and the results are so variegated that the categories run into the hundreds.
In a way, the medical profession 'bequeathed' these techniques to practitioners of folk medicine.
Traditionally, not only property is 'bequeathed' , but social and political position as well.
But above all, his mistake was to assume that he had done enough to win simply by being competent in office and by 'bequeathing' a healthy economy.
The Standish Collection was 'bequeathed' to King Louis-Philippe of France and was eventually sold in London in 1853.
By his will dated 8th June 1956 he appointed the Mother to be his executrix and 'bequeathed' all his property whatsoever or wheresoever to her.
Most of them are from his estate which was 'bequeathed' by his heirs to the State Russian Museum in today's St. Petersburg.
Heirs paid the debts of the 'bequeather' and other taxes according to the inherited parts the property.
This is a concept 'bequeathed' by the President, describing how to combine state planning with today's market economics.
The country's colonial past has 'bequeathed' a wealth of Indonesian restaurants.
Such is the system of administration 'bequeathed' by the past two decades.
Although 'bequeather' and descendant have specific personal interests, they agree in their concern for preserving the fortune.
The principle of freedom of testation leaves a person free to choose who should benefit from the estate, and there is nothing to prevent him 'bequeathing' everything to charity.
Credits: Google Translate