0 present participle of convey
1 to express a thought, feeling, or idea so that it is understood by other people:
Please convey our condolences to the family.
[ + question word ] I tried to convey in my speech how grateful we all were for his help.
You don't want to convey the impression that we're not interested.
2 to take or carry someone or something to a particular place:
Few journalists have managed to convey the full horror of the situation.
What the book does convey very successfully is the horror of war.
No report can convey the unspeakable suffering that this war has caused.
Words alone cannot convey the untold misery endured by people in these refugee camps.
With a single wag of her finger she managed to convey her total disapproval.
It would also have implications for identifying the central pathways conveying the visual information, and hence for the retinal sources.
The flashback's limitations as a way of conveying memory have been noted by contemporary film scholars.
Translation is dismissed as a means of conveying information, especially in the initial stages of learning (p. 78).