Absolutely. The testator (maker of the will) can make any changes to their own will that they wish. It would be a wise idea to remove the decesased child's name from the will - HOWEVER - in altering your will, be sure that you do not mistakenly dis-inherit anyone from their family that you do not intend to (i.e.: the spouse or any offspring).
(Él) ya falleció / ha fallecido. *Omit "él" if you know who the person is.
simply, just omit the subject.
The word omitting is a verb. It is the present participle of omit.
the message was omit
To omit is 'omettre' in French.
i omit at school lol
To omit means to leave out. Here are some sentences.Don't omit my name from the invitation this time.If you're not careful, you might omit something important from your report.We will omit anything that is offensive before we publish the article.
the answer of course is Unique Values
The root word of "omitted" is "omit." "Omit" means to leave out or exclude something.
omit your homework again. And you loose your grades.
Omit similar to remove, erase, exclude.
Put a minus sign before what you want to omit