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  1. illegitimate child. Source: Garner's Modern English Usage Author(s): Bryan A. Garner. Although the phrase is still often used, and although it’s undeniably better than bastard, it’s also undeniably insensitive. Since the mid-1970s, it has been falling in frequency of use.

  2. natural child: [noun] a child born out of lawful wedlock : an illegitimate child.

  3. I. INTRODUCTION No one would dispute that for most of U.S. history, “illegitimate”1 children suffered significant legal and societal discrimination.2 Under the common law, nonmarital children had no right to parental support and no right to inherit from or through a parent.3 They faced legal and societal.

  4. 4 de feb. de 2022 · The Bottom Line. Proper estate planning can often preempt confusion and conflict about a non-marital child’s inheritance status. In most states an illegitimate child can claim an inheritance so long as they can show that the deceased was their legal parent, and that this parentage was established before death.

  5. 29 de sept. de 2020 · Illegitimate. Bastard. Base-born. Reputed (the father accepts the child as his, or the child has been proven to be his) Imputed (the father denies the child is his) Misbegotten. Natural. Ignotis (Latin for “unknown”) Other countries used different terms, sometimes assigning the child a surname that in their language meant “unknown ...

  6. a child born to parents who are not married to each other; ... an illegitimate child. Note: The word bastard is no longer used in legal contexts. bastardy.

  7. Hace 3 días · 4 meanings: 1. born of parents who were not married to each other at the time of birth; bastard 2. forbidden by law; illegal;.... Click for more definitions.