- thereto. Such
tenures could be
either free-hold,
signifying that they were
hereditable or perpetual, or non-free
where the
tenancy terminated on the tenant's...
- duration, such
grants were
deemed freehold,
while fixed term and non-
hereditable grants were
deemed non-freehold. However, even
freehold fiefs were not...
- discovered, one has as
close as one
could imagine an
experiment in the
hereditability of intelligence,
moral ability, and criminality. On the "feeble-minded"...
- herbivore, herbivorous, herbivory, non-herbal hērēs hērēd- disinherit, heir,
hereditable, hereditament, hereditary, heredity, heritability, heritage, inherit...
- has
conducted research showing that
hereditable conditions like schizophrenia,
which have an 80%
hereditability with only 10% of
those who have inherited...
-
which lasted only for a term of years. Second...slave
status was made
hereditable through the mother. In so providing, the
American colonies reversed the...
- tenure,
becoming baronies in free socage, that is to say
under a "free" (
hereditable)
contract requiring payment of
monetary rents. Alfred, Lord Tennyson...
-
society to move from one
stratum to the other. The
social status is also
hereditable from one
generation to the next.
There are five
systems or
types of social...
- RB211
Cyril Burt:
controversial psychologist known for
studies on IQ
hereditability Geoffrey Healey: co-designer, with his
father Donald Healey, of Healey...
- of Holt in the
reign of
Richard II.
Feudal baronies had
always been
hereditable by primogeniture, but on
condition of
payment of a fine,
termed "relief"...