Need another word that means the same as “purport”? Find 38 synonyms and 30 related words for “purport” in this overview.
The synonyms of “Purport” are: aim, propose, purpose, claim, lay claim, profess, pretend, drift, intent, spirit, gist, substance, implication, intention, meaning, significance, signification, sense, essence, import, tenor, thrust, message, object, objective, goal, target, end, plan, scheme, design, idea, ambition, desire, wish, hope
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “purport” as a noun can have the following definitions:
aim | The direction or path along which something moves or along which it lies. He took aim and fired. |
ambition | Desire and determination to achieve success. Young men and women with ambition. |
design | A preliminary sketch indicating the plan for something. Inside the design reverts to turn of the century luxe. |
desire | Something desired. They were clinging together in fierce desire. |
drift | A continuous slow movement from one place to another. After so much drift any expression of enthusiasm is welcome. |
end | Either of the halves of a sports field or court defended by one team or player. Both ends wrote at the same time. |
essence | The choicest or most essential or most vital part of some idea or experience. Locke s scepticism about our ability to penetrate to the real essences of things. |
gist | The choicest or most essential or most vital part of some idea or experience. I decided to spend the night at his place catching up on all the gist from the wedding. |
goal | A cage or basket used as a goal in other sports. The decisive opening goal. |
hope | A specific instance of feeling hopeful. It revived their hope of winning the pennant. |
idea | A mental impression. Nineteenth century ideas about drinking. |
implication | Something that is inferred (deduced or entailed or implied. His resignation had political implications. |
import | Having important effects or influence. The import of his announcement was ambiguous. |
intent | Intention or purpose. With alarm she realized his intent. |
intention | A person’s plans, especially a man’s, in respect to marriage. She was full of good intentions. |
meaning | Implied or explicit significance. He gave me a look full of meaning. |
message | A significant political, social, or moral point that is being conveyed by a film, speech, etc. A campaign to get the message about home security across. |
object | A person or thing to which a specified action or feeling is directed. Small objects such as shells. |
objective | The objective case. Examine with high power objective. |
plan | A drawing or diagram made by projection on a horizontal plane especially one showing the layout of a building or one floor of a building. The UN peace plan. |
purpose | The quality of being determined to do or achieve something firmness of purpose. State pensions are considered as earned income for tax purposes. |
scheme | A schematic or preliminary plan. The occupational sick pay scheme. |
sense | Relating to or denoting a coding sequence of nucleotides complementary to an antisense sequence. I can t see the sense in leaving all the work to you. |
significance | The message that is intended or expressed or signified. Adolescent education was felt to be a social issue of some significance. |
signification | The message that is intended or expressed or signified. Film comes closer than other forms of signification to resemblance of reality. |
spirit | The prevailing or typical quality, mood, or attitude of a person, group, or period of time. We seek a harmony between body and spirit. |
substance | A particular kind of matter with uniform properties. DNA is the substance of our genes. |
target | The location of the target that is to be hit. The airport terminal was the target of a bomb. |
tenor | A singing voice between baritone and alto or countertenor the highest of the ordinary adult male range. Although I disagreed with him I could follow the tenor of his argument. |
wish | A thing that is or has been wished for. The Queen had sent her best wishes for a speedy recovery. |
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “purport” as a verb can have the following definitions:
aim | Point or direct (a weapon or camera) at a target. She had aimed the bottle at Gary s head. |
claim | Lay claim to as of an idea. A most unwelcome event claimed his attention. |
lay claim | Put into a certain place or abstract location. |
pretend | Represent fictitiously as in a play or pretend to be or act like. Children pretending to be grown ups. |
profess | Teach a subject as a professor. A people professing Christianity. |
propose | Propose or intend. He proposed to attend the meeting. |
purpose | Reach a decision. God has allowed suffering even purposed it. |
accusatory | Containing or expressing accusation- O.Henry. He pointed an accusatory finger in her direction. |
advise | Recommend. I advised him that the rent was due. |
advocate | A lawyer who pleads cases in court. Care managers can become advocates for their clients. |
affirmation | The act of affirming or asserting or stating something. He nodded in affirmation. |
aim | Direct (a missile or blow) at someone or something. It was created with the conscious aim of answering immediate needs. |
allege | Claim or assert that someone has done something illegal or wrong, typically without proof. He alleged that he was the victim of a crime. |
assert | Assert to be true. Women should assert themselves more. |
asserting | Relating to the use of or having the nature of a declaration. |
assertion | A confident and forceful statement of fact or belief. The assertion of his legal rights. |
aver | Report or maintain. He averred that he was innocent of the allegations. |
bluff | The act of bluffing in poker deception by a false show of confidence in the strength of your cards. His bluff succeeded in getting him accepted. |
claim | Lay claim to as of an idea. A strong legal claim to the property. |
declaration | A statement of taxable goods or of dutiable properties. A declaration of independence. |
declaratory | Having the function of declaring or explaining something. The decision was declaratory of the law. |
demur | Enter a demurrer. Normally she would have accepted the challenge but she demurred. |
exaction | The action of demanding and obtaining something from someone, especially a payment. The billions flow in through 28 taxes and countless smaller exactions. |
heading | A horizontal (or nearly horizontal) passageway in a mine. This topic falls under four main headings. |
incriminate | Suggest that someone is guilty. He refused to answer questions in order not to incriminate himself. |
insist | Postulate positively and assertively. He insisted on answers to his allegations. |
intent | Intention or purpose. With alarm she realized his intent. |
objective | The objective case. An objective appraisal. |
offer | The verbal act of offering. He had to offer some resistance to her tirade. |
proffer | Present for acceptance or rejection. She proffered a glass of wine. |
proponent | A person who advocates a theory, proposal, or course of action. A strong proponent of the free market and liberal trade policies. |
propose | Propose or intend. The senator proposed to abolish the sales tax. |
propound | Put forward, as of an idea. He began to propound the idea of a social monarchy as an alternative to Franco. |
statement | The act of affirming or asserting or stating something. The hope is that they will fill the stands and terraces to make a statement about the importance of this club. |
suggest | Suggest the necessity of an intervention in medicine. The seduction scenes suggest his guilt and her loneliness. |
suggestion | Persuasion formulated as a suggestion. There is no suggestion that he was involved in any wrongdoing. |
suitor | A man who courts a woman. She decided to marry her suitor. |
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