释义 |
bo·no·rum pos·ses·sio \bəˈnōrəmpəˈzesē(ˌ)ō, bōˈ-, -ˈses-\ noun Etymology: Latin, possession of goods Roman law : the right of possession of the property of a deceased person; specifically : the effective right to succeed, which changed the order of succession of the older jus civile, given by the praetor to emancipated children along with descendants in power, to cognatic after agnatic relatives, and last to the surviving spouse |