0 present participle of impart
1 to communicate information to someone:
It therefore needed to be rigorously developed and cultivated to enhance its status and efficiency as a tool for imparting knowledge, values and information.
We are not imparting received techniques because what is presented to us did not exist until the pupil(s) invented it.
Some of the means of imparting a sense of a sectarian identity are relatively new.
Its essential quality is not statement or the imparting of information.
We therefore disregard this indirect cost, once again imparting a potentially conservative bias to our value estimates.
In these cases, we chose the low value to avoid imparting any upward bias to our figures.
Of course, this depends on how far people regard 'citizenship' as imparting rights and responsibilities.
Thus, for this study, imparting information might be seen as a field of action and newspapers as a genre within it.