0 present 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.
That would be far more dangerous than bequeathing to them the shorter term problem of the disposal of nuclear waste.
But what a dreadful legacy we are now bequeathing to the future!
This is what we are bequeathing to succeeding generations.
Our citizens are now distraught and our young people anguished by the legacy we are bequeathing them.
If they seek actively to promote enmity between two parts of the island, they are bequeathing to their children a chilling legacy.
The last speaker referred to the very simple case of a man bequeathing everything to his wife.
For example, we are bequeathing to our successors some demographic problems, the full measure of which we have not yet taken.
I may well end up bequeathing those books outside this country.