Need another word that means the same as “impart”? Find 39 synonyms and 30 related words for “impart” in this overview.
Table Of Contents:
The synonyms of “Impart” are: carry, channel, conduct, convey, transmit, give, leave, pass on, add, bestow, bring, contribute, lend, communicate, relay, relate, recount, set forth, present, tell, make known, make public, go public with, report, announce, proclaim, spread, disseminate, circulate, promulgate, broadcast, confer, grant, accord, afford, provide, supply, offer, yield
Impart as a Verb
Definitions of "Impart" as a verb
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “impart” as a verb can have the following definitions:
- Bestow (a quality.
- Make (information) known.
- Bestow a quality on.
- Transmit (knowledge or skills.
- Transmit or serve as the medium for transmission.
Synonyms of "Impart" as a verb (39 Words)
accord | (of a concept or fact) be harmonious or consistent with. The national assembly accorded the General more power. |
add | Put in an additional element ingredient etc. I hope we haven t been too much trouble she added politely. |
afford | Afford access to. Only aristocrats could afford to stoop to such practices. |
announce | Announce publicly or officially. The President s office announced that the siege would be lifted. |
bestow | Bestow a quality on. Bestow an honor on someone. |
bring | Bring into a different state. Bring comments. |
broadcast | Broadcast over the airwaves as in radio or television. Broadcast the news. |
carry | Transfer (a number, cipher, or remainder) to the next column or unit’s place before or after, in addition or multiplication. The bridge is capable of carrying even the heaviest loads. |
channel | Cause to pass along or through a specified route or medium. She was channelling the spirit of Billie Holiday. |
circulate | Cause to become widely known. The air here does not circulate. |
communicate | Receive Holy Communion. A politician must have the ability to communicate. |
conduct | Transmit a form of energy such as heat or electricity by conduction. Heat is conducted to the surface. |
confer | Have a conference in order to talk something over. The Minister may have exceeded the powers conferred on him by Parliament. |
contribute | Contribute to some cause. He contributed to a private pension. |
convey | Communicate (a message or information. Pipes were laid to convey water to the house. |
disseminate | Spread throughout an organ or the body. There is a subset of these low grade tumours that can disseminate and migrate. |
give | Give entirely to a specific person activity or cause. Give me a second to bring the car around. |
go public with | Begin or set in motion. |
grant | Be willing to concede. Grant a privilege. |
leave | Leave behind unintentionally. Leave the young fawn alone. |
lend | Bestow a quality on. I will lend you my car. |
make known | Proceed along a path. |
make public | Create by artistic means. |
offer | Offer verbally. The Shakespeare Company is offering King Lear this month. |
pass on | Eliminate from the body. |
present | Represent abstractly for example in a painting drawing or sculpture. We presented the arguments to him. |
proclaim | Affirm or declare as an attribute or quality of. He had a rolling gait that proclaimed him a man of the sea. |
promulgate | Promote or make widely known (an idea or cause. In January 1852 the new Constitution was promulgated. |
provide | Make a possibility or provide opportunity for permit to be attainable or cause to remain. These clubs provide a much appreciated service for this area. |
recount | Tell someone about something; give an account of an event or experience. We had to recount all the votes after an accusation of fraud was made. |
relate | Feel sympathy for or identify with. High unemployment is related to high crime rates. |
relay | Control or operate by relay. Please relay the news to the villagers. |
report | Cover an event or subject as a journalist or a reporter. Undisclosed illegalities are reported to the company s directors. |
set forth | Bear fruit. |
spread | Become distributed or widespread. Spread each slice thinly with mayonnaise. |
supply | Give what is desired or needed, especially support, food or sustenance. The two reservoirs supply about 1 of the city s needs. |
tell | Express in words. Tell him to go away. |
transmit | Transmit or serve as the medium for transmission. Transmit a message. |
yield | (of a mass or structure) give way under force or pressure. This method yields the same results. |
Usage Examples of "Impart" as a verb
- Shiitake mushrooms impart a wonderfully woody flavour to the salad.
- The teachers imparted a great deal of knowledge to their pupils.
- Impart a new skill to the students.
Associations of "Impart" (30 Words)
amortization | The reduction of the value of an asset by prorating its cost over a period of years. Because of amortization you ll own your home by the end of the loan term. |
announce | Make known make an announcement. I have a confession to make she announced. |
apprise | Inform or tell (someone. Have the students been apprised of the tuition hike. |
assistance | Gift of money or other material help to support a person or cause. Economic assistance to depressed areas. |
authenticate | Prove or show (something) to be true, genuine, or valid. It only accepts commands from users who have authenticated as clients. |
bequeath | Leave or give by will after one’s death. My aunt bequeathed me all her jewelry. |
bestow | Bestow a quality on. Stooping to bestow the presents into eager hands. |
borrow | Allow (a certain distance) when playing a shot to compensate for sideways motion of the ball due to a slope or other irregularity. To meet this deficit the government has to borrow money. |
bring | Go or come after and bring or take back. She could not bring herself to mention it. |
conspicuously | In a way that attracts notice or attention. One important voice has been conspicuously absent. |
contribute | Contribute to some cause. He contributed articles to the magazine. |
credential | Provide with credentials. The Russian ambassador presented his credentials on September 30. |
descendants | All of the offspring of a given progenitor. |
disclose | Disclose to view as by removing a cover. The curtain rose to disclose a stunning set. |
disclosed | Made known (especially something secret or concealed. The disclosed purpose of their wicked plan. |
divulge | Make known to the public information that was previously known only to a few people or that was meant to be kept a secret. I do not want to divulge my plans at the moment. |
expose | Expose to light of photographic film. He published an expose of the graft and corruption in city government. |
finance | Provide funding for (a person or enterprise. The firm s finance department. |
give | Leave with give temporarily. For your entertainment this evening I give you Mister Albert DeNero. |
inform | Give incriminating information about someone to the police or other authority. She had informed on her own parents for years. |
lend | Give temporarily; let have for a limited time. The current system lends itself to great abuse. |
loan | A thing that is borrowed, especially a sum of money that is expected to be paid back with interest. Borrowers can take out a loan for 84 000. |
moneylender | A person whose business is lending money to others who pay interest. |
mortgage | A deed effecting a mortgage. I put down a hundred thousand in cash and took out a mortgage for the rest. |
notify | Give notice of or report (something) formally or officially. They were notified that John had been taken prisoner. |
posterity | The descendants of a person. The victims names are recorded for posterity. |
reveal | Make known to the public information that was previously known only to a few people or that was meant to be kept a secret. God rarely reveal his plans for Mankind. |
revealing | Disclosing unintentionally something concealed. A revealing glance. |
telltale | A device or object that automatically gives a visual indication of the state or presence of something. The telltale bulge of a concealed weapon. |
usury | Interest at unreasonably high rates. The medieval prohibition on usury. |