0 past simple and past participle of convey --
1 to express a thought, feeling, or idea so that it is understood by other people: --
You don't want to convey the impression that we're not interested.
[ + question word ] I tried to convey in my speech how grateful we all were for his help.
Please convey our condolences to the family.
2 to take or carry someone or something to a particular place: --
The voices of the rural poor are exceptionally well conveyed throughout, interspersed with the analytical accounts of patterns in their lives.
For instance, kindness can be exhorted, but its full meaning can be conveyed over a range of instances only by example.
The reason for this is that much of the information that is conveyed by language (both written and spoken) is heavily dependent upon word order.
Since the book concerns the linguistic information conveyed by the alliterative patterns of verse, its focus is almost exclusively on the onsets of stressed syllables.
The multiple messages conveyed by this story are subtle but not difficult to decipher.
Except that here the silence is magnified by the context, to proportions which far exceed anything that might be conveyed within song alone.
Importantly, the meanings conveyed by these novel utterances are in accord with those of the sentence frame used.
A non-verbal communication was interpreted as collaboration when communication was conveyed exclusively through musical interaction and focused on creative exchanges.