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HOME | Definition of descent (DESCENT, Descent)


    Descent \De*scent"\, n. [F. descente, fr. descendre; like vente,
    from vendre. See Descend.]
    1. The act of descending, or passing downward; change of
    place from higher to lower.
    [1913 Webster]

    2. Incursion; sudden attack; especially, hostile invasion
    from sea; -- often followed by upon or on; as, to make a
    descent upon the enemy.
    [1913 Webster]

    The United Provinces . . . ordered public prayer to
    God, when they feared that the French and English
    fleets would make a descent upon their coasts.
    --Jortin.
    [1913 Webster]

    3. Progress downward, as in station, virtue, as in station,
    virtue, and the like, from a higher to a lower state, from
    a higher to a lower state, from the more to the less
    important, from the better to the worse, etc.
    [1913 Webster]

    2. Derivation, as from an ancestor; procedure by generation;
    lineage; birth; extraction. --Dryden.
    [1913 Webster]

    5. (Law) Transmission of an estate by inheritance, usually,
    but not necessarily, in the descending line; title to
    inherit an estate by reason of consanguinity. --Abbott.
    [1913 Webster]

    6. Inclination downward; a descending way; inclined or
    sloping surface; declivity; slope; as, a steep descent.
    [1913 Webster]

    7. That which is descended; descendants; issue.
    [1913 Webster]

    If care of our descent perplex us most,
    Which must be born to certain woe. --Milton.
    [1913 Webster]

    8. A step or remove downward in any scale of gradation; a
    degree in the scale of genealogy; a generation.
    [1913 Webster]

    No man living is a thousand descents removed from
    Adam himself. --Hooker.
    [1913 Webster]

    9. Lowest place; extreme downward place. [R.]
    [1913 Webster]

    And from the extremest upward of thy head,
    To the descent and dust below thy foot. --Shak.

    10. (Mus.) A passing from a higher to a lower tone.

    Syn: Declivity; slope; degradation; extraction; lineage;
    assault; invasion; attack.
    [1913 Webster]

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48


    descent
    n 1: a movement downward
    2: properties attributable to your ancestry; "he comes from
    good origins" [syn: origin, extraction]
    3: the act of changing your location in a downward direction
    4: the kinship relation between an individual and the
    individual's progenitors [syn: line of descent, lineage,
    filiation]
    5: a downward slope or bend [syn: declivity, fall, decline,
    declination, declension, downslope] [ant: ascent]
    6: the descendants of one individual; "his entire lineage has
    been warriors" [syn: lineage, line, line of descent,
    bloodline, blood line, blood, pedigree, ancestry,
    origin, parentage, stemma, stock]

    WordNet (r) 2.0


    309 Moby Thesaurus words for "descent":
    Brownian movement, Indian file, abasement, advance, affiliation,
    altitude peak, angular motion, apparentation, array, articulation,
    ascending, ascent, automatic control, axial motion, backflowing,
    backing, backset, backward motion, bank, birth, blast-off, blood,
    bloodline, branch, breed, brood, burn, burnout, buzz, career,
    catena, catenation, ceiling, chain, chain reaction, chaining,
    characterize, check, children, climbing, comedown, coming after,
    common ancestry, communicate, concatenation, concavity, connection,
    consanguinity, consecution, consecutiveness, construe,
    continuation, continuity, continuum, course, current, cycle,
    de-escalation, debasement, decadence, decadency, declension,
    declination, decline, declivity, deflation, deformation,
    degeneracy, degenerateness, degeneration, degradation, delineate,
    demotion, depict, depravation, depravedness, depreciation,
    depression, derivation, derogation, descendants, descending,
    describe, deterioration, detrusion, devolution, diminution, dip,
    direct line, discomfiture, disgrace, distaff side, distinguish,
    down, downgate, downgrade, downhill, downtrend, downturn,
    downward mobility, downward motion, downward trend, drift,
    driftage, drone, drop, ducking, dump, dying, ebb, ebbing,
    effeteness, elucidate, embarrassment, end of burning, endless belt,
    endless round, exemplify, explain, explicate, expound, extension,
    extraction, fading, failing, failure, failure of nerve, fall,
    falling-off, family, female line, file, filiation, flight, flow,
    flux, following, forward motion, fruit, gamut, gradation, grade,
    gradient, grandchildren, great-grandchildren, hang, hangdog look,
    hanging, hauling down, heirs, hollowness, hostages to fortune,
    house, hum, humbled pride, humiliation, ignition, illustrate,
    image, impact, impart, incline, inheritors, interpret, involution,
    issue, kids, lapse, launch, letdown, lift-off, limn, line,
    line of descent, lineage, little ones, logical sequence,
    loss of tone, lowering, male line, monotone, mortification,
    mounting, narrate, new generation, nexus, oblique motion,
    offspring, ongoing, onrush, order, order of succession, origin,
    passage, pedigree, pendulum, periodicity, phylum, picture, plenum,
    plummeting, plunging, portray, posteriority, posterity,
    postposition, powder train, procession, progeny, progress,
    progression, prolongation, put-down, queue, race, radial motion,
    random motion, range, rank, recite, recount, recurrence, reduction,
    reflowing, refluence, reflux, regression, rehearse, render, report,
    reticulation, retrocession, retrogradation, retrogression,
    reversal, reverse, reverse of fortune, rise, rising,
    rising generation, rocket launching, rotation, round, routine, row,
    run, rush, scale, seed, self-abasement, self-abnegation,
    self-diminishment, sept, sequence, series, set, setback, setdown,
    severe check, shame, shamefacedness, shamefastness, shoot, shot,
    side, sideward motion, single file, sinking, slippage, slope,
    slump, soaring, sons, spear side, spectrum, spindle side, state,
    stem, sternway, stirps, stock, strain, stream, string, subjunction,
    submergence, subsiding, succession, successiveness, suffixation,
    swath, sword side, thread, throwback, thrusting under, tier, train,
    traject, trajectory, trajet, transmit, treasures, trend,
    upward motion, velocity peak, wane, windrow, younglings,
    youngsters

    Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0


    DESCENT. Hereditary succession. Descent is the title, whereby a person, upon
    the death of his ancestor, acquires the estate of the latter, as his heir at
    law: This manner of acquiring title is directly opposed to that of purchase.
    (q.v.) 2 Bouv. Inst. n. 1952, et seq.
    2. It will be proper to consider, 1. What kind of property descends;
    and, 2. The general rules of descent.
    3.-1. All real estate, and all freehold of inheritance in land,
    descend to the heir. And, as being accessory to the land and making a part
    of the inheritance, fixtures, and emblements, and all things annexed to, or
    connected with the land, descend with it to the heir. Terms for years, and
    other estates less than freehold, pass to the executor, and are not subjects
    of descent. It is a rule at common law that no one can inherit read estate
    unless he was heir to the person last seised. This does not apply as a
    general rule in the United States. Vide article Possessio fratris.
    4.-2. The general rules of the law of descent. 1. It is a general
    rule in the law of inheritance, that if a person owning real estate, dies
    seised, or as owner, without devising the same, the estate shall descend to
    his descendants in the direct line of lineal descent, and if there be but
    one person, then to him or her alone; and if more than one person, and all
    of equal degree of consanguinity to the ancestor, then the inheritance shall
    descend to the several persons as tenants in common in equal parts, however
    remote from the intestate the common degree of consanguinity may be. This
    rule is in favor of the equal claims of descending line, in the same degree,
    without distinction of sex, and to the exclusion of all other claimants. The
    following example will, illustrate it; it consists of three distinct cases:
    1. Suppose Paul shall die seised of real estate, leaving two sons and a
    daughter, in this case the estate would descend to them in equal parts; but
    suppose, 2. That instead of children, he should leave several grandchildren,
    two of them the children of his son Peter, and one the son of his son John,
    these will inherit the estate in equal proportions; or, 3. Instead of
    children and grandchildren, suppose Paul left ten great grandchildren, one
    the lineal descendant of his son John, and nine the descendants of his son
    Peter; these, like the others, would partake equally of the inheritance as
    tenants in common. According to 'Chancellor Kent, this rule prevails in all
    the United States, with this variation, that in Vermont the male descendants
    take double the share of females; and in South Carolina, the widow takes
    one-third of the estate in fee; and in Georgia, she tales a child's share in
    fee, if there be any children, and, if none, she then takes in each of those
    states, a moiety of the estate. In North and South Carolina, the claimant
    takes in all cases, per stirpes, though standing in the same degree. 4 Kent,
    Com. 371; Reeves' Law of Desc. passim; Griff. Law Reg., answers to the 6th
    interr. under the head of each state. In Louisiana the rule is, that in all
    cases in which representation is admitted, the partition is made by roots;
    if one root has produced several branches, the subdivision is also made by
    root in each branch, and the members of the branch take between them by
    heads. Civil Code, art. 895.
    5.-2. It is also a rule, that if a person dying seised, or as owner
    of the land, leaves lawful issue of different degrees of consanguinity, the
    inheritance shall descend to the children and grandchildren of the ancestor,
    if any be living, and to the issue of such children and grandchildren as
    shall be dead, and so on to the remotest degree, as tenants in common; but
    such grandchildren and their descendants, shall inherit only such share as
    their parents respectively would have inherited if living. This rule may be
    illustrated by the following example: 1. Suppose Peter, the ancestor, had
    two children; John, dead, (represented in the following diagram by figure
    1,) and Maria, living (fig. 2); John had two children, Joseph, living, (fig.
    3,) and Charles, dead (fig. 4); Charles had two children, Robert, living,
    (fig. 5,) and James, dead (fig. 6.); James had two children, both living,
    Ann, (fig. 7,) and William, (fig. 8.)

    Peter (0) the ancestor.
    ³
    ????????????????????¿
    ³ ³
    (1) John (2) Maria
    ³
    ?????????????¿
    ³ ³
    (3) Joseph (4) Charles
    ³
    ???????????¿
    ³ ³
    (5) Robert (6) James
    ³
    ???????????¿
    ³ ³
    (7) Ann (8) William

    In this case Maria would inherit one-half; Joseph, the son of John,
    one-half of the half, or quarter of the whole; Robert, one-eighth of the
    whole; and Ann and William, each one-sixteenth of the whole, which they
    would hold as tenants in common in these proportions. This is called
    inheritance per stirpes, by roots, because the heirs take in such portions
    only as their immediate ancestors would have inherited if living.
    6.-3. When the owner of land dies without lawful issue, leaving
    parents, it is the rule in some of the states, that the inheritance shall.
    ascend to them, first to the father, and then to the mother, or jointly to
    both, under certain regulations prescribed by statute.
    7.-4. When the intestate dies without issue or parents, the estate
    descends to his brothers and sisters and their representatives. When there
    are such relations, and all of equal degree of consanguinity to the
    intestate, the inheritance descends to them in equal parts, however remote
    from the intestate the common degree of consanguinity may be. When all the
    heirs are brothers and sisters, or all of them nephews and nieces, they take
    equally. When some are dead who leave issue, and some are living, then those
    who are living take the share they would have taken if all had been living,
    and the descendants of those who are dead inherit only the share which their
    immediate parents would have received if living. When the direct lineal
    descendants stand in equal degrees, they take per capita, by the head, each
    one full share; when, on the contrary, they stand in different degrees of
    consanguinity to the common ancestor, they take per stirpes, by roots, by
    right of representation. It is nearly a general rule, that the ascending
    line, after parents, is postponed to the collateral line of brothers and
    sisters. Considerable difference exists in the laws of the several states,
    when the next of kin are nephews and nieces, and uncles and aunts claim as
    standing in the same degree. In many of the states, all these relations take
    equally as being next of kin; this is the rule in the states of New
    Hampshire, Vermont, (subject to the claim of the males to a double portion
    as above stated,) Rhode Island, North Carolina, and Louisiana. In Alabama,
    Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Indiana, Illinois, Kentucky, Maine,
    Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, Ohio,
    Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia, on the contrary,
    nephews and nieces take in exclusion of uncles and aunts, though they be of
    equal degree of consanguinity to the intestate. In Alabama, Connecticut,
    Georgia, Maryland, New Hampshire, Ohio, Rhode Island, and Vermont, there is
    no representation among collaterals after the children of brothers and
    sisters in Delaware, none after the grandchildren. of brothers and sisters.
    In Louisiana, the ascending line must be exhausted before the estate passes
    to collaterals, Code, art. 910. In North Carolina, claimants take per
    stirpes in every case, though they stand in equal degree of consanguinity to
    the common ancestor. As to the distinction between whole and half blood,
    vide Half blood.
    8.-5. Chancellor Kent lays it down as a general rule in the American
    law of descent, that when the intestate has left no lineal descendants, nor
    parents, nor brothers, nor sisters, or their descendants, that the
    grandfather takes the estate, before uncles and aunts, as being nearest of
    kin to the intestate.
    9.-6. When the intestate dies leaving no lineal descendants, nor
    parents, nor brothers, nor sisters, nor any of their descendants, nor grand
    parents, as a general rule, it is presumed, the inheritance descends to the
    brothers and sisters, of both the intestate's parents, and to their
    descendants, equally. When they all stand in equal degree to the intestate,
    they take per capita, and when in unequal degree, per stirpes. To this
    general rule, however, there are slight variations in some of the states,
    as, in Now York, grand parents do not take before collaterals.
    10.-7. When the inheritance came to the intestate on the part of the
    father, then the brothers and sisters of the father and their descendant's
    shall have the preference, and, in default of them, the estate shall descend
    to the brothers and sisters of the mother, and their descendants and where
    the inheritance comes to the intestate on the part of his mother, then her
    brothers and sisters, and their descendants, have a preference, and in
    default of them, the brothers and sisters on the side of the father, and
    their descendants, inherit. This is the rule in Connecticut, New Jersey, New
    York, North Carolina, Ohio, Rhode island, Tennessee, and Virginia. In
    Pennsylvania, it is provided by act of assembly, April 8, 1833, that no
    person who is not of the blood of the ancestors or other relations from whom
    any real estate descended, or by whom it was given or devised to the
    intestate, shall in any of the cases before mentioned, take any estate of
    inheritance therein, but such real estate subject to such life estate as may
    be in existence by virtue of this act, shall pass to and vest in such other
    persons as would be entitled by this act, if the persons not of the blood of
    such ancestor, or other relation, had never existed, or were dead at the
    decease of the intestate. In some of the states there is perhaps no
    distinction as to the descent, whether they have been acquired by purchase
    or by descent from an ancestor.
    11.-8. When there is a failure of heirs under the preceding rules, the
    inheritance descends" to the remaining next of kin of the intestate,
    according to the rules in the statute of distribution of the personal
    estate, subject to the doctrine in the preceding rules in the different
    states as to the half blood, to ancestral estates, and as to the equality of
    distribution. This rule prevails in several states, subject to some
    peculiarities in the local laws of descent, which extend to this rule.
    12. It is proper before closing this article, to remind the reader, that
    in computing the degrees of consanguinity, the civil law is followed
    generally in this country, except in North Carolina, where the rules of the
    common law in their application to descents are adopted, to ascertain the
    degree of consanguinity. Vide the articles Branch; Consanguinity; Degree;
    Line.

    Bouvier's Law Dictionary, Revised 6th Ed (1856)




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