heir
/eə(r)/ (bre, ipa) · /er/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈer/ (ame, mw)
heir — noun
- heirsingular
- heirsplural
1. a person whom the law entitles to receive the money, property, or rank of someon
a person whom the law entitles to receive the money, property, or rank of someone who has died, typically a family member.
After her uncle's death, Diya discovered she was the sole heir to his entire estate.
sole heir — common legal collocation
The lawyer explained that only direct heirs could claim a share of the property.
direct heir — family inheritance pattern
Reuben's grandfather left him the house, making him the legal heir to the family home.
As the only surviving child, Yael became the rightful heir to her mother's jewellery collection.
When the billionaire died without a will, the court spent months determining his true heir.
- inheritor
less legal, more neutral; can refer to inheriting abstract things like traits
- beneficiary
receives something (not necessarily from a deceased person); broader scope, e.g. a charity can be a beneficiary
- legatee
specifically someone who receives property through a will; formal legal term
- disinherited person
someone who has been deliberately excluded from an inheritance
用法筆記
Frequently found in legal contexts with adjectives such as sole, direct, legal, or rightful. The object of inheritance is typically introduced by the preposition to — heir to an estate, heir to a fortune.
常見錯誤
2. a person who takes over the work, artistic style, or official position of someon
a person who takes over the work, artistic style, or official position of someone significant after that person leaves or dies.
Prince Hiro is the eldest child and the heir to the throne.
heir to the throne — fixed expression for royal succession
Many art critics see Élise as the true heir to her grandmother's painting tradition.
The young chef was hailed as the heir to a famous culinary dynasty.
As the heir to his father's business, Mauricio spent years learning each department.
After Professor Okonkwo retired, Nia became the natural heir to her genetics research project.
- successor
emphasises the role or position rather than family ties; 'successor to the throne' (rival form)
- descendant
focuses on bloodline, not necessarily on continuing work or tradition
- inheritor
broader; can mean someone who takes over a style, tradition, or mission
- predecessor
the person who held the role or position before
用法筆記
Distinguish from sense 1: in sense 1 the person receives actual legal property; in this sense (sense 2) the person takes over a role, tradition, or creative legacy. This sense often uses adjectives like spiritual, natural, or true to indicate non-legal succession.
常見錯誤
3. a person who must deal with a difficult situation or unresolved problem left by
a person who must deal with a difficult situation or unresolved problem left by an earlier generation or previous office-holder.
The new president was the unwilling heir to a country deep in political chaos.
heir to + abstract noun phrase — metaphorical use
Anong became the heir to a failing school system when she took the principal's job.
Lukas took over the factory and became the heir to its poor management and broken machines.
The new mayor became the heir to a budget crisis that had worsened for years.
用法筆記
Almost always followed by to + an abstract noun or noun phrase describing a difficulty (crisis, debt, mess, chaos, breakdown). The modifier unwilling is common because this sense often implies the responsibility was unwanted.
常見錯誤
heir — verb
- heirpresent simple I / you / we / they
- heirs3rd person singular
- heiring-ing form
- heiredpast simple
1. to receive money, property, or a title by law after the previous owner dies — a
to receive money, property, or a title by law after the previous owner dies — a less common alternative to the verb 'inherit', mostly found in legal documents and older texts.
Under the 18th-century law, the eldest son would heir the family farm and livestock.
rare verb; usually replaced by 'inherit'
The document stated that Christopher would heir the title upon his uncle's death.
The old law declared the king's eldest son would heir the crown after the king died.
Under the terms of the will, the eldest daughter was to heir the family's antique collection.
- inherit
the standard modern verb for receiving property after a death
文法句型
heir + noun phrase
用法筆記
This verb form is very rare in modern English. In everyday speech and writing, inherit is used instead. You may encounter to heir in older legal texts, wills, or historical fiction.