0 past simple and past participle of probate --
1 to prove that a person's will has been made correctly and that the information it contains is correct --
His estate was probated at 280,971.
Pick's will was probated at 36,433 12s 9d (approximately 0 in present day terms).
Probated in 1925, it was 1,066 pages, and had to be bound in 4 volumes; her estate was worth $100,000.
All wills are probated in this court and all estates of people who die without a will are handled in this court.
His will was not probated until 1857 and her new acquisitions were recorded in his name.
His estate was probated at 45,044, a relatively modest sum for such a famous public figure.
His personal estate, then worth 750, was insufficient when his will was finally probated in 1891.
In 1904, his estate was probated at under 121,000 pounds sterling.