hereditary

وراثي
definition
adjective
members of the ancient Polish aristocracy who had hereditary right to elect the king
(of a title, office, or right) conferred by or based on inheritance.
translation of 'hereditary'
adjective
ذو لقب,
موروث,
وراثي
example
The original constitution restricted the right to vote by property but outlawed 'hereditary' titles and added trial by jury in criminal cases.
Talk of a 'hereditary' succession gained momentum after news reports late last month that North Korea's state radio hinted at such a plan.
Yoritomo took the title of shogun, which had been a temporary commission from the emperor, and made it a permanent 'hereditary' office.
Now Canadian writer Alex Bulmer offers her experience of going blind in adulthood as a result of a 'hereditary' genetic disease.
And if you buy into the principle of 'hereditary' monarchy, it surely follows that you expect the royal family to behave better than us ordinary folk.
It deals with, among many other things, the conflict between 'hereditary' and elective principles and the constitutional problems of a second chamber.
A whole range of completely different maps would be obtained if the criterion was head shape, nose length, crinkliness of hair, relative lengths of arms and legs or any other 'hereditary' difference.
Discovering the presence of fibrinogen defect in another family member is the best way to show a 'hereditary' condition.
Buffalo City mayor Sindisile Maclean told Swedes in Linkoping, Sweden this week how South Africa was battling to incorporate 'hereditary' leaders into the new democratic order.
Members of a 'hereditary' Siddha family must be encouraged to practice without any restrictions by giving registration so that the skill is not lost.
Six members are 'hereditary' peers: the Duke of Buccleuch, the Earl of Wemyss, the Earl of Elgin, the Earl of Airlie, the Viscount of Arbuthnott, and the Earl of Crawford.
This study confirms that members of families with 'hereditary' non-polyposis colorectal cancer require surveillance with short intervals.
Although all of these diseases have 'hereditary' factors, most can be prevented with relatively simple steps: healthy eating, being physically active, and not smoking.
The people were governed by 'hereditary' princes called Sao-Phas who ruled in as many as forty different principalities.
He said a foetus does, however, have rights in certain civil cases regarding 'hereditary' rights whereby an unborn child may be entitled to an inheritance.
'hereditary' right
The 51-year-old inherited the baronetcy from his late father, Sir Denis, who had the 'hereditary' title bestowed upon him after his wife ceased to be prime minister.
Continuity in government was no longer simply a matter of 'hereditary' right; instead the state was increasingly perceived as autonomous, independent of whomever happened to be ruling at any given moment.
The 'hereditary' elements proposed by Darwin were more physical - and therein lay their downfall.
Christy, the blacksmith and rightful heir, has no sense of the estate as his own, and can barely understand the revelation that he is the 'hereditary' lord.
This characteristic is 'hereditary' , passed on from a person to his children.
The shogunate was the government of the shogun, or 'hereditary' military dictator, of Japan and this type of rule lasted from 1192 to 1867.
But acclamation did not rule out the possibility of 'hereditary' or even dynastic successions.
It also extended to the butchers the extraordinary right to close their corporation, rendering membership strictly 'hereditary' .
Human trials of gene-based therapies aimed at both macular degeneration and 'hereditary' blindness are set to begin in the U.K. perhaps as early as next year.
Abolition of the 'hereditary' element in the Lords was carried through without, it seemed, much idea of what was to follow.
Denmark is a constitutional monarchy in which succession to the throne is 'hereditary' and the ruling monarch must be a member of the national church.
Kifaya's oft-chanted slogan, ‘no to extension no to 'hereditary' succession’, is more relevant than ever, said spokesman Abdel-Halim Qandil.
It is through war that a 'hereditary' prince retains power and a private citizen rises to power.
Either you think the head of government in the United Kingdom should be picked by 'hereditary' principle or you do not.
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