|
REPLACEMENT |
Successor |
|
DESCENDANT |
Successor |
|
HEIR |
Successor |
|
NAMED |
Announced (successor) |
|
|
NAME |
Announce (successor) |
|
STALIN |
Lenin’s successor |
|
BLURAY |
DVD successor |
|
TRUMP |
Obama’s successor |
|
|
YELTSIN |
Gorbachev's successor |
|
EURO |
Franc's successor |
|
SUCCEEDER |
A successor. |
|
SOLOMON |
King David's successor |
|
INHERIT |
Be successor to |
|
EDWARD |
Queen Victoria’s successor, King ... VII |
|
SUCCESSION |
The person succeeding to rank or office; a successor or
heir. |
|
DEVOLUTION |
Transference from one person to another; a passing or
devolving upon a successor. |
|
INTERCESSOR |
A bishop, who, during a vacancy of the see,
administers the bishopric till a successor is installed. |
|
IMAUM |
A Mohammedan prince who, as a successor of Mohammed, unites
in his person supreme spiritual and temporal power. |
|
INTERREGNUM |
The time during which a throne is vacant between the
death or abdication of a sovereign and the accession of his successor. |
|
CALIPH |
Successor or vicar; -- a title of the successors of
Mohammed both as temporal and spiritual rulers, now used by the sultans
of Turkey. |
|
SUPERORDINATION |
The ordination of a person to fill a station
already occupied; especially, the ordination by an ecclesiastical
official, during his lifetime, of his successor. |
|
CAESAR |
A Roman emperor, as being the successor of Augustus Caesar.
Hence, a kaiser, or emperor of Germany, or any emperor or powerful
ruler. See Kaiser, Kesar. |
|
DEMISE |
Transmission by formal act or conveyance to an heir or
successor; transference; especially, the transfer or transmission of
the crown or royal authority to a successor. |
|
SUCCESSOR |
One who succeeds or follows; one who takes the place
which another has left, and sustains the like part or character; --
correlative to predecessor; as, the successor of a deceased king. |
|
ABROGATE |
To annul by an authoritative act; to abolish by the
authority of the maker or his successor; to repeal; -- applied to the
repeal of laws, decrees, ordinances, the abolition of customs, etc. |