| 1. | passing, or capable of passing, naturally from parent to offspring through the genes: Blue eyes are hereditary in our family. Compare congenital. |
| 2. | of or pertaining to inheritance or heredity: a hereditary title. |
| 3. | existing by reason of feeling, opinions, or prejudices held by predecessors: a hereditary enemy. |
| 4. | Law.
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| 5. | Mathematics.
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he·red·i·tar·y (hə-rěd'ĭ-těr'ē) adj.
[Middle English, from Latin hērēditārius, from hērēditās, inheritance; see heredity.] he·red'i·tar'i·ly (-târ'ə-lē) adv., he·red'i·tar'i·ness n. |
A descriptive term for conditions capable of being transmitted from parent to offspring through the genes. The term hereditary is applied to diseases such as hemophilia and characteristics such as the tendency toward baldness that pass from parents to children.
hereditary he·red·i·tar·y (hə-rěd'ĭ-těr'ē)
adj.
Transmitted or capable of being transmitted genetically from parent to offspring.
| hereditary (hə-rěd'ĭ-těr'ē) Pronunciation Key
Passed or capable of being passed from parent to offspring by means of genes. |