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Probate   /prˈoʊbˌeɪt/   Listen
noun
Probate  n.  
1.
Proof. (Obs.)
2.
(Law)
(a)
Official proof; especially, the proof before a competent officer or tribunal that an instrument offered, purporting to be the last will and testament of a person deceased, is indeed his lawful act; the copy of a will proved, under the seal of the Court of Probate, delivered to the executors with a certificate of its having been proved.
(b)
The right or jurisdiction of proving wills.



verb
Probate  v. t.  To obtain the official approval of, as of an instrument purporting to be the last will and testament; as, the executor has probated the will.



adjective
Probate  adj.  Of or belonging to a probate, or court of probate; as, a probate record.
Probate Court, or Court of Probate, a court for the probate of wills.
Probate duty, a government tax on property passing by will. (Eng.)






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Probate" Quotes from Famous Books



... was frequently mentioned favourably in these old wills. Another Cuckfield testator, in 1539, left to the high altar, "for tythes and oblacions negligently forgotten, sixpence." The same student of the Calendar of Sussex Wills in the District Probate Registry at Lewes, between 1541 and 1652, which the British Record Society have just published, copies the following passage from the will of Gerard Onstye, in 1568: "To mary my daughter L20, the ffeatherbed that I lye upon the bolsters and coverlete of tapestaye work with a blankett, 4 payres ...
— Highways & Byways in Sussex • E.V. Lucas

... during the lifetime of the first. Since it is to the expense attendant upon this luxury that such abstinence is probably to be attributed, it really reflects great credit upon the Bosnian Benedicts that the meal-sack has been so seldom brought into play,—that ancient and most expeditious Court of Probate and Divorce in matrimonial cases. After marriage, the women conceal themselves more strictly than in most other parts of Turkey. Perhaps in this the husbands act upon the homoeopathic principle, that prevention is better than cure; for divorces are unheard of, and are considered ...
— Herzegovina - Or, Omer Pacha and the Christian Rebels • George Arbuthnot

... axe or spearhead would have taken the place of the flint arrows and the greenstone tomahawk: for savages always bury a man's best property together with his corpse, while civilised men take care to preserve it with pious care in their own possession, and to fight over it strenuously in the court of probate. ...
— Falling in Love - With Other Essays on More Exact Branches of Science • Grant Allen

... idea for establishing my reputation for memory. It was a note about the death duties which had been collected in England during 1910, and it gave a list of about twenty estates on which large sums had been paid. The list included the names of the deceased and also the amounts on which probate duty had been paid. I decided to commit these names and figures to memory and to take an occasion the next day to reel ...
— An Adventure With A Genius • Alleyne Ireland

... which had been called up into the old gentleman's face by the good wine, were gone. Looking gloomily before him, he said sharply, "Ah! that's an instance of the corruption of our abandoned young men. They fix their infernal eyes, there probate seducers, upon mere children. For I tell you, my good sir, that my niece Marianna is quite a child, quite a child, only just outgrown her ...
— Weird Tales. Vol. I • E. T. A. Hoffmann


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