17 quotes about inherited follow in order of popularity. Be sure to bookmark and share your favorites!

Blood is inherited and virtue is acquired.

Venezuelan Proverb

They may have exacerbated it, but they also inherited it. That has to be part of the defense. It's got to be.

Chip Harp

I think back a little bit when President Bush was elected President and what kind of economy he inherited from the Clinton administration. The economy was going down. It was not doing well.

Wayne Allard

I feel like my little brother has inherited the same musical talents I've been blessed with.

Samantha Mumba

Finding out the religious background of your ancestors will also help you understand their actions and possibly the attitudes that you inherited.

Shirley Sloat

This is a result of something we inherited, and we're glad it's behind us.

Sheri Woodruff

The whole clubhouse likes him. He communicates well and really got us to remain focused. He definitely got as much as he could out of the guys, given everything he inherited. I'm excited for him and the team.

David Newhan

Oracle's success hinges on retaining its customer base, including ones it inherited from the companies it bought.

David Rudow

I inherited a dysfunctional government.

Joseph Davis

We chose pretty much all the furniture. There are a few pieces of furniture that we inherited, but mostly it's all new.

Heather Faulding

Character isn't inherited. One builds it daily by the way one thinks and acts, thought by thought, action by action.

Helen Gahagan Douglas

In any case, the task of finding fresh approaches to opera and to choral music will be inherited by the future.

George Crumb

Talent, lying in the understanding, is often inherited; genius, being the action of reason or imagination, rarely or never.

Samuel Taylor Coleridge

We inherited such a disaster.

Thabo Mbeki

Herb inherited a program in 1996 that was in need of consistent success, and he brought that back to N.C. State basketball ... .

Lee Fowler

I think the better bet is that we went into a geographical area that has a variant of these germs, that we're not familiar with, that we don't have any inherited immunity to.

Edward Hyman

Cage's Music of Changes was a further indication that the arts in general were beginning to consciously deal with the "given" material and, to varying degrees, liberating them from the inherited, functional concepts of control.

Earle Brown