kindred [ˈkɪn.drɪd]
adj
To say that two people or things are kindred is to say that they are of a similar nature or character, or that they have the same ancestry.
Family—both ancestral and in spirit—is what puts the “kin” in kindred. This word comes from the Old English noun for “kinship,” cynrǣden, which combines cynn (meaning “kin”) and ræden, meaning “condition.”
Other words akin to kin include kinfolk (and kinsfolk), kinship, kinsman, and kinswoman.
English
Optimized studying based on the forgetting curve vastly improves memorization. - What is reminDO?
Memorize