A testator () is a person who has written and executed a last will and testament that is in effect at the time of their death. It is any "person who makes a will."
A testator () is a person who has written and executed a last will and testament that is in effect at the time of their death. It is any "person who makes a will."
==Related terms== A female testator is sometimes referred to as a testatrix (), plural testatrices (), particularly in older cases. In Ahmadiyya Islam, a testator is referred to as a moosi, who is someone that has signed up for Wasiyyat or a will, under the plan initiated by the Promised Messiah, thus committing a portion, not less than one-tenth, of his lifetime earnings and any property to a cause. The adjectival form of the word is testamentary, as in: Testamentary capacity, or mental capacity or ability to execute a will and Testamentary disposition, or gift made in a will (see that article for types). Testamentary trust, a trust that is created in a will. A will is also known as a last will and testament. Testacy means the status of being testate, that is, having executed a will. The property of such a person goes through the probate process. Intestacy means the status of not having made a will, or to have died without a valid will. The estate of a person who dies intestate, undergoes administration, rather than probate. The attestation clause of a will is where the witnesses to a will attest to certain facts concerning the making of the will by the testator, and where they sign their names as witnesses.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).