convey
IPA: kʌnvˈeɪ
verb
- To move (something) from one place to another.
- (dated) To take or carry (someone) from one place to another.
- To communicate; to make known; to portray.
- (law) To transfer legal rights (to).
- (obsolete) To manage with privacy; to carry out.
- (obsolete) To carry or take away secretly; to steal; to thieve.
Advertisement
Examples of "convey" in Sentences
- He conveys the warning of the angels.
- The image helps to convey the subject of the article.
- The prose is workmanlike and conveys the information clearly.
- It's impossible to convey a long, agonizing spiritual odyssey.
- Q: The big message you are trying to convey is to "slow down."
- The purpose of the logos is to convey the history of the brand.
- The convey the most realistic translation of sound into language.
- The phrase is not derogatory but conveys a sense of overindulgence.
- In this way it conveys information about the duration of the stimulus.
- Neither does the term convey an idea to my understanding of any thing.
- The entire phrase is unnecessary to convey the meaning of the sentence.
- The Gemara turned to how the community should convey assistance to the pauper.
- I guess what I am trying to convey is it doesn't matter if Trig is her son or not.
- The one thing that you DON'T want to convey is that rights can be negotiated away.
- What they presumably mean to convey is the idea of something rushing headlong down a street on a dangerously erratic course.
- The point I tried to convey is that users should have a choice – freedom to decide how and where their data resides and is used.
- Shortly after, a senior non-commissioned officer, whose name Hickman didn't know, ordered him to convey a code word to a petty officer.
Related Links
synonyms for conveyAdvertisement
Advertisement