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Synonyms

bequeath

American  
[bih-kweeth, -kweeth] / bɪˈkwiθ, -ˈkwið /

verb (used with object)

bequeaths, present (3rd person singular) bequeathed, past participle, past bequeathing present participle
  1. to dispose of (personal property, especially money) by last will.

    She bequeathed her half of the company to her niece.

    Synonyms:
    consign, grant, bestow, leave, impart, will
  2. to hand down; pass on.

  3. Obsolete. to commit; entrust.


bequeath British  
/ bɪˈkwiːð, -ˈkwiːθ /

verb

  1. law to dispose of (property, esp personal property) by will Compare devise

  2. to hand down; pass on, as to following generations

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

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Conjugated Forms

Present

Past

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Etymology

Origin of bequeath

First recorded before 1000; Middle English bequethen, Old English becwethan ( be- be- + cwethan “to say” ( see quoth), cognate with Old High German quedan, Gothic qithan )

Explanation

To bequeath is to leave your possessions to another person after you die. A man might love his classic cars but would be happy to bequeath them to his grandchildren when he writes out his last will and testament. Bequeath often is used about making plans to give away property and possessions after a person's death, like the pearl necklace that your great-grandmother bequeathed to you or a house that your uncle bequeathed to a his favorite charity. Sometimes bequeath is used for things handed down without death, as when living parents and grandparents pass, or bequeath, a legacy of stories or family traits and talents as an inheritance.

Keep Reading on Vocabulary.com

Vocabulary lists containing bequeath

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

See Examples For:

But rising life expectancy expands their time horizon, and many households with $1 million or more in investable assets intend to bequeath a substantial portion of their assets.

From The Wall Street Journal May 21, 2026

Why do voters and MPs bequeath and remove their support with seemingly such casual ease?

From BBC May 16, 2026

Related: My second husband will leave me $540,000 if I bequeath him my $130,000 net worth.

From MarketWatch Apr. 8, 2026

If you bequeath a Roth, heirs’ withdrawals are tax-free.

From Barron's Mar. 5, 2026

He went on to bequeath little bits of money and jewelry to each of them, never clarifying which one he considered his Koh-i-noor.

From "The God of Small Things" by Arundhati Roy

The director of “The Fly” and “Videodrome” isn’t in the film long, but he bequeaths prestige upon these splat-hijinks that they don’t quite deserve.

From Los Angeles Times Mar. 19, 2026

The passage of great TV characters bequeaths to their survivors, including the audience, a rummage of questions that end up shaping their journey.

From Salon Apr. 21, 2025

Liz Truss bequeaths her successor a party in chaos, spiralling prices, rising interest rates and squeezed government budgets.

From BBC Oct. 20, 2022

He admits that “my wish to learn Sanskrit was an attempt to deal intellectually with a country whose reality perturbed me,” but the language bequeaths him a vast literary inheritance.

From The New Yorker Mar. 30, 2019

She bequeaths her stuffed toys to Gloria’s fourteen-year- old daughter.

From "Enrique's Journey" by Sonia Nazario

Each box owner has about 10 seats that can be transferred, rented out or bequeathed.

From Los Angeles Times Jun. 10, 2026

The divergent societies the two ships bequeathed would foster what Mr. Reynolds maintains were in effect two competing nationalities.

From The Wall Street Journal Jun. 10, 2026

Monkhouse bequeathed his joke book collection to his writing partner in his will.

From BBC Mar. 24, 2026

But many who served in the front lines maintained their revolutionary zeal, becoming more determined to sustain the regime Khomeini bequeathed to them.

From The Wall Street Journal Mar. 9, 2026

But the Europeans carried a disease, and they bequeathed it to their jailers.

From "1491" by Charles C. Mann

Hassan got further scope to exercise his instincts after Hafez al-Assad died in 2000, bequeathing power to his second son, Bashar, a British-educated eye surgeon.

From The Wall Street Journal Dec. 12, 2025

He played the role of mediator, bequeathing legitimacy to a group which seemingly needed his normalcy.

From Salon Sep. 22, 2024

Longtime Dodgers fans will cringe at the bequeathing of so much power to one player, but this is how it works in Tinseltown.

From Los Angeles Times Mar. 14, 2024

Klopp is bequeathing a deep and richly talented squad, with a number of youngsters starting to blossom.

From Seattle Times Feb. 22, 2024

Rewrite my will with a clause about my bequeathing the drawing to them.

From "From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler" by E.L. Konigsburg

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