- Assets include broken tea set - Bankrupt property featured a broken tea set - Deceased's property - Deceased’s property - Extensive parcel of land - House and land - Housing area
- Respected older woman - Wealthy widow - Widow was entitled to make bet - A widow endowed, or having a jointure; a widow who either
enjoys a dower from her deceased husband, or has property of her own
brought by her to her husband on marriage, and settled on her after his
decease. - A title given in England to a widow, to distinguish her
from the wife of her husband's heir bearing the same name; -- chiefly
applied to widows of personages of rank.
- Add ass to ET’s belongings - Assents to giving away northern property - Fool set out to seek wealth - Goods as prescribed by section head - Holdings - One's property and resources - Personal wealth
- an itemized list of everything you have - Detailed list of items - Detailed list of items in stock - Stock holding - An account, catalogue, or schedule, made by an executor
or administrator, of all the goods and chattels, and sometimes of the
real estate, of a deceased person; a list of the property of which a
person or estate is found to be possessed; hence, an itemized list of
goods or valuables, with their estimated worth; specifically, the
annual account of stock taken in any business. - To make an inventory of; to make a list, catalogue,
or schedule of; to insert or register in an account of goods; as, a
merchant inventories his stock.
- A jumble - A mingled mass; a confused mixture; a stew of various
ingredients; a hodgepodge. - A blending of property for equality of division, as
when lands given in frank-marriage to one daughter were, after the
death of the ancestor, blended with the lands descending to her and to
her sisters from the same ancestor, and then divided in equal portions
among all the daughters. In modern usage, a mixing together, or
throwing into a common mass or stock, of the estate left by a person
deceased and the amounts advanced to any particular child or children,
for the purpose of a more equal division, or of equalizing the shares
of all the children; the property advanced being accounted for at its
value when given.