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Convey

Convey is a verb with several related senses centered on transfer or transmission. In its primary sense, it means to carry or transport something from one place to another: a vehicle conveys passengers; a pipeline conveys water. It also means to communicate information, meaning, or feeling: a report conveys findings; a gesture can convey warmth. In legal usage, convey means to transfer title or ownership of real property from one person to another, a process known as conveyance.

Convey derives from Old French convoi, meaning “carriage, procession,” from Latin via, meaning “way.” The word

Usage notes: convey is a transitive verb that typically requires a direct object and, for the communicative

entered
English
in
the
Middle
Ages,
and
the
legal
sense
of
transferring
property
developed
in
the
medieval
period.
sense,
a
recipient
(convey
something
to
someone).
Examples
include
“The
deed
conveys
title
to
the
buyer”
and
“The
letter
conveys
her
gratitude
to
the
recipients.”
In
everyday
speech,
convey
can
be
used
with
the
preposition
to
(convey
to
someone)
or
with
prepositions
indicating
the
channel
(convey
information
through
a
report).
The
noun
form
is
conveyance,
referring
to
the
act
or
document
of
transfer,
especially
in
real
property
law;
the
related
device
that
physically
moves
objects
is
a
conveyor.