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The site shows example sentences for English words. How the word or phrase could be used in a sentence?
" ... At the moment, estate tax rules allow the wealthy to pass along, via gifts, up to $11.4 million for couples and $22.8 million for singles, using 2019 rates. Not many people have that big a pile to bequeath to younger generations. ... "
" ... Example: Say you broke up a year ago with your boyfriend, the bum, who you had left your entire estate to. You realize this and want to instead update your revocable trust and bequeath your estate to your nieces and nephews. Your lawyer, who is unaware of the quirky document you signed many years earlier with your coop has you sign an amended and restated revocable trust with the new dispositive scheme. Years later, after you pass, your former boyfriend discovers that the approval process was not complied with and uses the clause in the coop form to challenge the new distribution plan since the agreement you signed expressly said that no modification could be effective if the process mandated by the coop were not adhered to. No one adhered to it because no one remembered it and you have a new lawyer who had no idea. ... "
" ... Perpetual life—Ownership interests in a corporation may be transferred to others. Shareholders can sell, gift, or bequeath their shares of company stock, and the corporation continues to exist. Only when a C Corp is formally dissolved is its life ended. ... "
" ... The glorious Bibliotheque Mazarine was built over two decades from the 1660s to house the ... [+] collections of Louis XIV's first minister, Cardinal Mazarin, who wanted to bequeath his collection to the public. The library opened its doors in 1691 within the prestigious Institut de France quarters on Quai de Conti ... "
" ... This inclusive model is not new; it has always been prevalent among family companies. In the 19th century, companies such as Cadbury’s created villages, housing and services for employees because they felt a responsibility for their well-being. Family owners accept personal responsibility because their values are on display in their business. They realize that their success is connected to the support of their employees, suppliers and customers, and they live by values that are greater than just financial success. The owners of a family business also care about their family’s legacy and the world they will bequeath to their children and grandchildren, which leads to a longer-term perspective. The owners are willing to limit what they take out of the business now to reinvest in its future, and this includes the cost of caring about and investing in their employees. In this respect, family businesses answer one of the major dilemmas in the Friedman model: When making decisions, should the rational, profit-optimizing company aim for short-term returns to owners, or should they create conditions for the company to thrive long-term? Family businesses care more for the latter, and to ensure long-term success, they for example, may create two classes of stock, with one class given to a small number of family owners who have voting rights on major decisions. These voting shareholders can preserve a long-term view and resist quick fixes that generate immediate profit but weaken investment on the future. When non-voting owners invest in the company, they know about and support that perspective. An owner primacy company also must balance current benefit with future opportunities, but its inherent demands for immediate profit place a heavy weight on its decision making. ... "