This distinction is independent of whether the altruism involved in child rearing is toward descendants or toward collateral relatives, as when aunts and uncle rear their nieces and nephews.
12.
:: The word " cousin " is sometimes used generically to refer to any collateral relative, not necessarily a child of one's parent's sibling.
13.
On the death of his father, he returned to France in 1688 to collect his inheritance, but a collateral relative who had already taken hold of it, denounced him.
14.
For collateral relatives, 1 / 1000 common ancestry can be approximated by 10th degree consanguinity for relationships derived through half-siblings and 11th degree consanguinity for relationships derived through full siblings.
15.
In the 1850s, many of Staker's grandchildren, great-grandchildren, and collateral relatives emigrated to Kane County, Illinois, USA, a rural area west of Chicago.
16.
Because of an illness, he installed his infant son Tokimune as the " tokusM " while Nagatoki, a collateral relative, was appointed " shikken " to assist Tokimune.
17.
In 1544 the direct line ended, and the rightful heir, a collateral relative by the name of Charles Campbell of Corranmore in Craignish had the misfortune to kill Gillies of Glenmore in a brawl.
18.
Collateral relatives, who share some or all of the grantee's ancestry, but do not directly descend from the grantee, may inherit if there is no limitation to " heirs of the body ".
19.
His marriage to Antigone reveals that Magas was a nobleman of some social status and influence as he married a close relation to the powerful Regent and his wife was a distant collateral relative to the Argead dynasty.
20.
The law bans marriage between close relatives, which is defined as lineal relatives, blood relative in the direct line of descent, and collateral relatives, such as cousins or uncles, to the third degree of relationship.