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jointure Meaning in Bengali



 পতির মৃত্যুর পর স্ত্রীধনাপ্রাপ্ত রমণী,

উপার্জন বা একটি একক হওয়ার আইন

Noun:

পতির মৃত্যুর পর স্ত্রীধনাপ্রাপ্ত রমণী,





jointure's Usage Examples:

of the Countess of Warwick's jointure.


5 Assurance of Lady Cobham's jointure.


6 Assurance of Lady Stafford's jointure.


Faunt deceased, for raising portions for younger children and providing a jointure for his wife.


33 Confirmation of Queen Anne's jointure.


2 Enabling Sir Charles Barrington to settle a jointure and make provision for his younger children.


She was in debt by £2400 and asked the Queen to help realise her jointure property in March 1597.


because of the reduction in the estates that would be entailed by her jointure.


father's earldom, his mother's Ingoldsthorpe estates, and the more modest jointure of his parents.


devise of one's share of a joint estate, by will, is no severance of the jointure; for no testament takes effect till after the death of the testator, and.


This was the jointure (préciput) and typically came to half the dower's value.


Almost all married couples of the time created a jointure in their marriage.


under a marriage settlement, under which she agreed to take instead a jointure, that is a particular interest in her husband's property, either a particular.


earldom in 1717, but the estates were much diminished by his stepmother's jointure and bequests to his brothers and half-brothers.


Joan Beauchamp would enjoy by jointure and survivorship rights for life to the entirety of the lordship of Bergavenny;.


Academy, originally opened in 1950 on Old York Road in Hatboro following the jointure of the Hatboro-Horsham School District.


property on which the Globe was built to his wife, Frances, as part of her jointure.


from both her husbands' jointures amounted to £3,000 annually, to which came plate and movables worth £6,000.


However, her jointure was to suffer greatly.


' At the time her jointure from her first marriage was £2000, a significant fortune.


She was described by Claudius' brother as "a very amiable woman with a jointure of £2,500 per annum.


of her life with her sister Lady Fauconberg, though she had so great a jointure from her first husband, that she was a great misfortune to the Russell.



jointure's Meaning':

the act of making or becoming a single unit

Synonyms:

umbrella; tribalisation; coalescency; combination; uniting; reunion; coalition; reunification; conjugation; compounding; concretion; coalescence; combining; conglutination; unification; tribalization; union;

Antonyms:

disunion; detribalisation; detribalization; noncomprehensive; nonalignment;

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