Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
If the husband of a woman die, his wife may take her husband's patrimony.
In France at least, high art is called the people's patrimony.
I know that this is a difficult debate, being about our patrimony.
They are all very important because of their medieval patrimony.
A key portion of the family patrimony was in the King's hands.
What this has done, however, is to deny foreign countries their patrimony.
They would soon have eaten up all the poor patrimony.
"I felt it should be placed in the national patrimony," she said.
From the architectural point of view, the city has an interesting patrimony.
If we marry, it turns into a question of patrimonies.
They had never become rich, because there were always children, and the patrimony was divided every time.
"The best solution is to keep it as a national patrimony and a solid company."
Established almost 300 years ago, the foundation has built up a huge patrimony.
"I had a dispute with my own brothers about our patrimony."
Augustine then sold his patrimony and gave the money to the poor.
Money is considered an adequate replacement for the lost patrimony.
"She is part of our national patrimony, and everyone thinks that they know her.
And yet both candidates' relationships to their patrimony are more complicated.
Many feel the papers are already part of the national patrimony and should be donated by the family.
By one rough guess, 70 percent of the country's artistic patrimony is in church hands.
Americans should not have to buy an amusement park ticket to experience their patrimony.
So at first it was a center of patrimony.
Immediately afterwards, in 2 December 1908, the patrimony became a new town.
But if things are too liberal, national patrimonies will be dismantled.
Its images are those of high art, regarded in France as the people's patrimony.