English edit

Noun edit

heretor (plural heretors)

  1. Alternative form of heritor
    • 1730, Journals of the House of Lords, page 634:
      [] Heretors or Proprietors of Lands within the Pariſh of Avendale []
    • 1865 (published), Charles Fraser-Mackintosh, Antiquarian Notes: A Series of Papers Regarding Families and Places in the Highlands, Inverness: [], page 280:
      18. Item—Adams decreet against Laird Chaip, heretor of the land where this annual is gotten. 27th Jan. 1570.
    • 1890 (published), Archæological and Historical Collections Relating to the County of Renfrew, volume II, Paisley: Alexander Gardner, page 195:
      James Clerk in Rivoch, heretor in Walls, 40mks. val., 1lib 6sh;
    • 1916 (published), Publications of the Scottish History Society, page 81:
      [] marying the Lady Beochamps, and he became heritor of Lochow by marying the foresd Evah heretrix therof (his eldest brother Dionysius having remained in ffrance as heretor of Campus bellus or Beochamps as was formerly marked.

Latin edit

Verb edit

hērētor

  1. second/third-person singular future passive imperative of hēreō