- Ancestry - Ancestry evident a long time after wrinkle appears - Bloodline - Couple grow old with connection - Descent - Descent from an ancestor - Disguised angel, i.e. in ancestry
- Body fluid - Brood swaps hands for vampire’s dinner - Gore - Ill-feeling, bad ... - Kinship - Thoroughbred - The fluid which circulates in the principal vascular system
of animals, carrying nourishment to all parts of the body, and bringing
away waste products to be excreted. See under Arterial.
- Next to - Of a line - One-dimensional - Descending in a direct line from an ancestor; hereditary;
derived from ancestors; -- opposed to collateral; as, a lineal descent
or a lineal descendant. - Inheriting by direct descent; having the right by direct
descent to succeed (to). - Composed of lines; delineated; as, lineal designs. - In the direction of a line; of or pertaining to a line;
measured on, or ascertained by, a line; linear; as, lineal magnitude.
- Study of family lines - An account or history of the descent of a person or
family from an ancestor; enumeration of ancestors and their children in
the natural order of succession; a pedigree. - Regular descent of a person or family from a progenitor;
pedigree; lineage.
- Resemblance between different plants or animals, in
external shape, in general habit, or in organs, which is not due to
descent from a common ancestor, but to similar surrounding
circumstances.
- Be successor to - Became heir to - Come into a fortune - Come into main heritage shelter - Come into money - Gain estate - Get legacy and partly gain her items
- Creation (of electrical power) - Limit on Mr Hackman’s age group - Parent/child (gap) - Production (of electrical power) - Sort of production before gap or X could be lost - Stage in natural descent - The act of generating or begetting; procreation, as of
animals.
- Joint nature. - The correspondence of common descent; -- a term used to
supersede homology by Lankester, who also used homoplasy to denote any
superinduced correspondence of position and structure in parts
embryonically distinct (other writers using the term homoplasmy). Thus,
there is homogeny between the fore limb of a mammal and the wing of a
bird; but the right and left ventricles of the heart in both are only
in homoplasy with each other, these having arisen independently since
the divergence of both groups from a univentricular ancestor.