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heritress. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
heritress, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
heritress in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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English
Etymology
From heritor + -ess.
Noun
heritress (plural heritresses)
- A female heritor.
1839 February, H[enry] W[illiam] Herbert, “The Saxon Prelate’s Doom”, in The Ladies’ Companion, a Monthly Magazine, Embracing Every Department of Literature, volume X, New York, N.Y.: William W. Snowden, page 154, column 1:The mightiest monarch of his age, Sovereign of England—as his proud grandsire made his vaunt of yore—by right of the sword’s edge; Grand Duke of Normandy, by privilege of blood; and liege-lord of Guienne, by marriage with its powerful Heritress;
1881, Biographical Catalogue of the Portraits at Longleat in the County of Wilts the Seat of the Marquis of Bath, London: Elliot Stock, pages 177–178:M. and Madame Chateauneuf were delighted with the child, observing that ‘she spoke Latin, French, and Italian well, sufficiently handsome in the face, and without doubt the lawful heritress of the kingdom, if James of Scotland be excluded.’
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