Kin spouse 2025

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  1. Click ‘Get Form’ to open the Heirship Affidavit in the editor.
  2. Begin by entering your name as the affiant in the designated field. This identifies you as the person making the affidavit.
  3. Fill in the name of the decedent, ensuring accuracy as this is crucial for legal purposes.
  4. Provide details about the decedent's death, including city, county, state, and date of death.
  5. Indicate the name of the spouse and confirm that there was only one marriage.
  6. List all children born from this marriage. Include names and specify if any have passed away without issue.
  7. Finally, detail who survives the decedent, including their relationship to them (e.g., widow/widower, children).

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Kin is a blood relative. The term kin is ordinarily applied to relationships through ties of blood or consanguinity. However, it is sometimes used generally to include relatives by marriage or adoption. Kin is also called kindred, kinsman, and kinswoman.
Both words date back to Old English, with kin docHubing back to the 700s. Originally referring to ones family or race, kin narrowed to refer just to ones blood relations. Your next of kin is your closest family member: spouse, child, parent, or sibling. Definitions of kin.