In the 1920s, Italy changed the regulations stating that females could not inherit Italian titles, however, her lifetime was before this date.
Finally, "it is when all possible male heirs have been exhausted that the females" may inherit.
Both males and females can inherit and transmit an autosomal dominant cancer predisposition.
Unlike males, females can inherit their status from their mothers or move between communities and rise up the pecking order.
In some chimpanzee communities, the young females may inherit high status from a high-ranking mother.
In contrast, a female must inherit two mutant alleles, a less frequent event since the mutant allele is rare in the population.
The Act of Succession was changed so that females could also inherit the Danish throne, though still preferring even younger brothers.
The females in the Kisaragi family inherit the company, but it has no connection with Shun's girlish figure.
Males and females may inherit and transmit the disorder to offspring.
Thus, the Salic law was changed to male-preference primogeniture in 1953, meaning that females could inherit, but only if they had no brothers.