inheritance.

listen to the pronunciation of inheritance.
İngilizce - Türkçe
miras

Babam bana büyük bir miras bıraktı. - My father left me a large inheritance.

Büyük oğlu mirasını ikiye katlamayı başardı - The oldest son succeeded in doubling his inheritance.

kalıt alma
{i} biyol. kalıtım, soyaçekim
(Biyoloji) irsiyet
(Biyokimya) kalıtsallık
(Tıp) inheritans
(Ticaret) tereke
hereditament
kalıtsal
hereditament
mirasla geçen mal
inheritance
kalıt
heritance
mirasının
hereditament
{i} mülk
hereditament
kalıt
hereditament
{i} miras kalan varlık
hereditament
miras yoluyla kalabilen mal
hereditament
{i} mal
inheritance
(Tıp) Kalıtsal özelliklerin anne ve babadan çocuğa geçmesi, soyaçekim, irsiyet, kalıtım
inheritance
{i} veraset

Gerçekten veraset vergisinin ne kadar tutacağını merak ediyorum. - I really wonder how much the inheritance tax will amount to.

inheritance
(Tıp) Kalıtım yoluyla anne-babadan çocuğa geçen özellikler, kalıt
inheritance
{i} soyaçekim
inheritance
mirasa konma/miras
inheritance
(Hukuk) intikal
İngilizce - İngilizce
hereditament
heritance
In object-oriented programming, the mechanism whereby parts of a superclass are available to instances of its subclass
The hereditary passing of biological attributes from ancestors to their offspring
That which a person is entitled to inherit, by law or testament
The process by which one class shares the definition and implementation provided by another Also the process by which one interface extends another Uses the Java keyword extends See the chapter on Inheritance
As distinguished from a bequest or devise, an inheritance is property acquired through laws of descent and distribution from a person who dies without leaving a will Property so acquired usually takes as its basis, for gain or loss on later disposition or for depreciation, the fair market value at the date of the decedent's death An inheritance of property is not a taxable event, but the income from an inheritance is taxable
a way of relating classes, so one class has access to the other's members
In object-oriented programming, the ability of a superclass to pass its characteristics (methods and instance variables) on to its subclasses, allowing subclasses to reuse these characteristics
{i} estate, property left by deceased person to heirs; attributes or genetic qualities passed from parents to offspring; hierarchical transfer of all definitions and methods of a class to its sub-classes (in object-oriented computer programming)
That which is or may be inherited; that which is derived by an heir from an ancestor or other person; a heritage; a possession which passes by descent
The passing of title to an estate upon death
that which is inherited; a title or property or estate that passes by law to the heir on the death of the owner
In an object-oriented approach, inheritance is the concept that when a class of objects is defined, any subclass that is defined can inherit the definition of one or more general classes In the case where some modification to the definition is needed in the subclass, you can include a new methods and properties in the definition
Often considered the key to being object-oriented, this is the concept that an object can gain the interface and actual behaviors (implementation) of another object and can then extend that interface or those behaviors I may create a generic Product object that handles things common to all my products From it, I may create a NonTaxableProduct and a TaxableProduct Both would inherit the original Product object's interface and behaviors, but would extend or change some of those behaviors as needed
The concept of classes automatically containing the variables and methods defined in their superclasses
If you get something such as job, problem, or attitude from someone who used to have it, you can refer to this as an inheritance. the situation that was Truman's inheritance as President
The mechanism by which attributes (slots or data) and behaviors (methods) are made available to objects Parent inheritance allows views of dissimilar types to share slots containing data or methods Prototype inheritance allows a template to base its definition on that of another template or prototype Source: NPG
The process by which a class's slots and methods are determined from an ancestor
used to describe a trait or gene passed from one generation to the next
Relator between classes An OOP paradigm which allows members of one class to be used as if they were members of a second class Supported in C++ by a derivation mechanism: If class B is derived from class A, B is a "kid", "child" or subclass of the "parent", super- or base class A A base class without parents is called the "root" class of the inheritance tree See also encapsulation
An inheritance is money or property which you receive from someone who has died. She feared losing her inheritance to her stepmother
The act or state of inheriting; as, the inheritance of an estate; the inheritance of mental or physical qualities
(genetics) attributes acquired via biological heredity from the parents
A mechanism for reusing code, by which each class inherits the methods (and optionally the data) of its superclass By identifying where different types of objects have common functionality, you can implement the common methods for that functionality in a single class and inherit it in any number of subclasses Each class inherits all the methods of its superclass, so a class ultimately inherits all methods all the way up to the root class (Base) A class object inherits the class methods of its superclass, and an instance object inherits the instance methods of its superclass In this Object COBOL implementation, a class has only one immediate superclass The superclass is named in the inherits clause of the class-id paragraph of the class which implements the class
Your inheritance is the particular characteristics or qualities which your family or ancestors had and which you are born with. Eye colour shows your genetic inheritance. Devolution of property on an heir or heirs upon the death of its owner. In civil law jurisdictions it is called succession. The concept depends on a common acceptance of the notion of private ownership of goods and property. Under some systems, land is considered communal property and rights to it are redistributed, rather than bequeathed, on the death of a community member. In many countries, a minimum portion of the decedent's estate must be assigned to the surviving spouse and often to the progeny as well. Intestacy laws, which govern the inheritance of estates whose distribution is not directed by a will, universally view kinship between the decedent and the beneficiary as a primary consideration. Inheritance usually entails payment of an inheritance tax. See also inheritance tax; intestate succession; probate
In object-oriented programming, the ability to create new classes (or interfaces) that contain all the methods and properties of another class (or interface), plus additional methods and properties If class (or interface) D inherits from class (or interface) B, then D is said to be derived from B B is said to be a base class (or interface) for D Some programming languages allow for multiple inheritance, that is, inheritance from more than one class or interface
The capability by which properties (data and methods) are inherited by a child class from the parent (base) class The inheritance feature of object-oriented programming allows a programmer to "re-use" functions and facilities of other objects, without having to copy the code
The hereditary passing of biological attributes from the parents to its off-spring
A feature of object-oriented programming languages in which a sub type inherits methods and variables from its super type Inheritance is most commonly used as a synonym for class inheritance {class!inheritance}, but interface inheritance is also a feature of some languages, including Java
A perpetual or continuing right which a man and his heirs have to an estate; an estate which a man has by descent as heir to another, or which he may transmit to another as his heir; an estate derived from an ancestor to an heir in course of law
A relationship that defines one entity in terms of another Class inheritance defines a new class in terms of one or more parent classes The new class inherits its interface and implementation from its parents The new class is called a subclass or (in C++) a derived class Class inheritance combines interface inheritance and implementation inheritance Interface inheritance defines a new interface in terms of one or more existing interfaces Implementation inheritance defines a new implementation in terms of one or more existing implementations [Gamma+ 95]
A permanent or valuable possession or blessing, esp
(genetics) attributes acquired via biological heredity from the parents that which is inherited; a title or property or estate that passes by law to the heir on the death of the owner
The transfer of object features (data attributes and operations) from a "class" that defines the common features of similar objects
In object-oriented programming, specific properties of child objects
hereditary succession to a title or an office or property any attribute or immaterial possession that is inherited from ancestors; "my only inheritance was my mother's blessing"; "the world's heritage of knowledge"
The ability of a subclass to take on the characteristics of the class it's derived from If the characteristics of the parent class change, the subclass on which it is based inherits those characteristics For example, if you add a new property, IsBold, to an editing control, any subclasses based on your control will also have an IsBold property See "Implementation of TObject" in the Articles Section for more information
any attribute or immaterial possession that is inherited from ancestors; "my only inheritance was my mother's blessing"; "the world's heritage of knowledge"
(1) An object-oriented programming technique that allows the use of existing classes as bases for creating other classes (2) A mechanism by which a derived class can use the attributes, relationships, and member functions defined in more abstract classes related to it (its base classes) (3) In the EJB Development Environment, there are two forms of inheritance: class inheritance and EJB inheritance In class inheritance, the home interface, remote interface, or enterprise bean class inherits properties and methods from base classes that are not themselves enterprise bean classes or interfaces In EJB inheritance, an enterprise bean can inherit properties (such as container-managed persistence fields and association ends), methods, and method-level control descriptor attributes from another enterprise bean that resides in the same group
A parent-child relationship between two classes A child (subclass) inherits the slots of its parent classes (superclasses)
Possession; ownership; acquisition
That which a person in entitled to inherit
hereditary succession to a title or an office or property
Mechanism whereby a class obtains part of its behavioural and structural description from another class The child class automatically obtains the attributes and methods of the parent, and may add to them See classification
one received by gift or without purchase; a benefaction
Generally, the ability of a newly-created object to automatically have, or inherit, properties of an existing object For example, a newly created child directory can inherit the access­control settings of the parent directory
A class is said to inherit resources or support functions from its superclasses, since those functions and resources are available to the subclass See superclass, and composite class
Transmission and reception by animal or plant generation
inheritance.