Entail Definition

ĕn-tāl, ĭn-
entailed, entails
verb
entailed, entails
To limit the inheritance of (real property) to a specific line or class of heirs.
Webster's New World
To cause or require as a necessary consequence; involve; necessitate.
The plan entails work.
Webster's New World
To bestow or impose on a person or a specified succession of heirs.
American Heritage

To settle or fix inalienably on a person or thing, or on a person and his descendants or a certain line of descendants; -- said especially of an estate; to bestow as a heritage.

Wiktionary
Antonyms:
noun
entails
The act of entailing, especially property.
American Heritage
An entailing or being entailed.
Webster's New World
The state of being entailed.
American Heritage
That which is entailed, as an estate.
Webster's New World
Necessary sequence, as the order of descent for an entailed inheritance.
Webster's New World

Other Word Forms of Entail

Noun

Singular:
entail
Plural:
entails

Origin of Entail

  • From Old English entaile (“carving”), from Old French entaille (“incision”), from entailler (“to notch, (literally) to cut in”); from prefix en- + tailler (“to cut”), from Late Latin taliare, from Latin talea. Compare late Latin feudum talliatum (“a fee entailed, i.e., curtailed or limited”).

    From Wiktionary

  • Middle English entaillen to limit inheritance to specific heirs en- intensive pref. en–1 taille tail tail2

    From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition

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