If the man and woman owned the property as joint tenants with the right of survivorship then his interest automatically passed to her when he died. His children would have no interest in the property. She is now the sole owner.
If all assets were held by the couple as joint property with the right of survivorship then full ownership of the property passed to the father's companion when he died. The children would be entitled only to property owned by their father in his own name alone. Any such property would pass to his children under the state laws of intestacy if he died without a will.
Your question is incomplete. That being said, we'll try to anticipate where you were going with it, and give an answer based on that anticipation. Assuming you're referring to the girlfriend of a veteran, they're not entitled to anything. No educational benefits, no SGLI benefits, nothing. A spouse or child would be; a boyfriend or girlfriend is not. If the girlfriend is the veteran, she is entitled to benefits - her boyfriend (or girlfriend, if applicable) would not be.
You are not entitled to anything. Zip, zilch, zero. That is the difference between living with someone and getting married. Married couples have a legal foundation, but a boyfriend/girlfriend relationship has nothing. When it is done, it is done. You get to keep your belongings that you paid for or were gifts from others to you and he gets to keep his.
Yes
girlfriend means she is entitled and sweetheart means there is love or care just not the girlfriend position
celebrities are entitled to privacy
Yes, he can, just as any parent is entitled to do so around their children of any age.
No you are not entitled to the ring back. You gave it to her as a gift.
No she is not entitled to anything if it not in her name and if you guys arent legally married.
It depends on a number of factors: Are you listed in the will? If not, you probably are not entitled to anything. If you husband has passed away, and he had children with you, you may be entitled to some of it in trust for the children. If your husband is living, no, the inheritance belongs to him.
It basically means if children can get gifts from their parents.
Only that she contributed to