0 past simple and past participle of bequeath --
1 to arrange for money or property to be given to somebody after your death: --
Picasso bequeathed most of his paintings and sculptures to Spain and France.
This wealth will be bequeathed in the year the surviving member of the couple dies, which in terms of probability is expressed in factor 5 of equation (2).
By contrast, they assiduously noted the names of the six benefactors who bequeathed sums (totalling less than £24) to the overseers.
Distinguished men bequeathed their own brains to anatomists, who expressed their gratitude with a dignified publication of the anatomical results.
An infinite planning horizon is assumed because fishing gear is usually bequeathed to subsequent generations.
Such land could be lost to the patrilineage if women married outside the clan and bequeathed the land to their children.
Of course, these new cultural practices bequeathed novel ways of classifying individuals and, in turn, implied new structures of action and opportunity.
What is left to replace the yearly pathos bequeathed from one generation to the next?
That ensures that the ratio of bequeathed wealth to income tends to remain stable, no matter how much income might rise.