0 present participle of inherit --
1 to receive money, a house, etc. from someone after they have died: --
2 to be born with the same physical or mental characteristics as one of your parents or grandparents: --
3 to begin to have responsibility for a problem or situation that previously existed or belonged to another person: --
Sometimes he used the word "materialism" or its derivatives pejoratively: the possibility of inheriting acquired characteristics was, for instance, "the merest sensational materialism" (86).
Naturally, it is a dynamic map building inheriting stochastic model.
I am inheriting a healthy and thriving operation because of their skills and commitment.
It has also been argued that these systems encouraged the permanent emigration of those children who had no prospect of inheriting land.
There were 50 instances of the customary inheritance in which, as a result of daughters inheriting jointly, a total of 57 people inherited land.
Inheriting the ie meant inheriting both property (house and residential land) and the family business.
We want them to optimize themselves inheriting good properties from the previous versions.
Functions with these signatures must be defined for all objects inheriting from vertex list graph.