ascendencia
ascendancy ; descent ; ancestry ; parentage ; lineage ; stock ; bloodline ; line of ancestry.
Their ascendancy may be traced through the Main or tumbler machine of 1840, Payne's Wharfedale stop-cylinder machine of 1858, and the improved Wharfedales produced by Paine and others in the mid 1860s.
The editions of a work need have little in common other than descent from a common origin.
These terms are necessarily rather vague, but have a very respectable ancestry (they go back to Aristotle).
The database may, as a result of its parentage, be handicapped by features that are not suited to computerized retrieval.
The lineage of PRECIS indexing: PRECIS indexing has roots in faceted classification.
It also proves the absurdity of Nazi race theories of 'racial purity,' since the various peoples of Mitteleurope, the Germans in particular, are among the most mixed stocks in Europe.
Mrs. Obama's family tree highlights the complicated racial intermingling in the bloodlines of many African-Americans.
A pure-blood vampire has no human blood in their line of ancestry.
ascendencia real
royal descent
Royal descent is sometimes claimed as a mark of distinction.
ascendencia + remontarse a
trace + ascendancy
Their ascendancy may be traced through the Main or tumbler machine of 1840, Payne's Wharfedale stop-cylinder machine of 1858, and the improved Wharfedales produced by Paine and others in the mid 1860s.
de ascendencia + Adjetivo
of + Adjetivo + descent
The project, completed in 1989, collected biobibliographic data on 7,30 Austrian authors of Jewish descent.
tener una ascendencia
descend from + ancestry
This article offers librarians clues for helping users who descend from English and Welsh ancestry solve genealogical mysteries.