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conveyable

/kuhn-vey/US // kənˈveɪ //UK // (kənˈveɪ) //

可输送,可输送的,可运输,可传送

Related Words

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to carry, bring, or take from one place to another; transport; bear.
    • : to communicate; impart; make known: to convey a wish.
    • : to lead or conduct, as a channel or medium; transmit
    • : Law. to transfer; pass the title to.
    • : Archaic. steal; purloin.
    • : Obsolete. to take away secretly.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • I’m also coming back to that idea that the questions that we ask convey information.

  • Payne points out that while Nextdoor can give users some local information, it can create a warped sense of local reality, and there’s no guarantee it’s accurately conveying the severity of the pandemic in local communities.

  • Cooking has always been how I convey what I can’t quite put into words.

  • By familiarizing yourself with their daily routines, interests, and the common areas of need that are sure to come up, it becomes much easier to find a gift that conveys how much you care about your special someone and their experiences.

  • We correctly conveyed that the storm would not have a major impact on the area, rating it a Category 1 on our five-point scale.

  • Elisabetta Piqué, who knew Bergoglio well as a cardinal, writes in the present tense as if to convey real time passing.

  • Overall, Paris Magnum reaches both too widely and too thinly in trying to convey a sense of spectrum.

  • The home was a direct representation of his character, so in place of dialogue, we used props and set design to convey his story.

  • In the meantime, who better to convey the film's appeal than Pauline Kael, the fabulous longtime New Yorker movie critic.

  • The group has also used couriers to convey some messages in order to avoid digital communications altogether.

  • The carriage, waiting to convey them away, was already at the door, the impatient horses pawing the ground.

  • In writing K. I try to convey the truth in terms which will neither give him needless anxiety or undue confidence.

  • Another act of bankruptcy is to convey, transfer, conceal or remove property with the intention to defraud creditors.

  • As there is no air surrounding the bell there is nothing to convey its vibrations to the ear.

  • In this she differed from others of her sect, who strove to convey the idea of humility both outwardly and inwardly.