[
US
/ˌɪmˈpɑɹt/
]
[ UK /ɪmpˈɑːt/ ]
[ UK /ɪmpˈɑːt/ ]
VERB
-
transmit (knowledge or skills)
leave your name and address here
give a secret to the Russians
impart a new skill to the students -
transmit or serve as the medium for transmission
The airwaves carry the sound
Sound carries well over water
Many metals conduct heat -
bestow a quality on
The music added a lot to the play
She brings a special atmosphere to our meetings
This adds a light note to the program
Her presence lends a certain cachet to the company
How To Use impart In A Sentence
- Moreover, she is being asked to do this while remaining scrupulously impartial and keeping the viewer entertained with talk of trade deals, tariffs and employment figures. Times, Sunday Times
- There is so much to enjoy here that it is a pity that a good deal of the information imparted is demonstrably wrong. The Times Literary Supplement
- There is a great deal of feeling and perhaps some bitterness, but do you not all agree with me that it is quite possible, since there is a fashion of armament in Europe, and since there has been no withdrawal on the part of the Admiralty from the stand taken by the First Lord some months ago, to have the entire Canadian people approach this situation in a calm and in an impartial manner? Canada and the Empire
- The BBC must ensure that due impartiality is preserved in its news programmes.
- Still less can they accept impartial public broadcasting combined with a biased press and biased satellite television.
- It's important that this information is imparted to the audience.
- The broadcasting media are statutorily required to be impartial.
- An adjudicator must be, and must be seen to be, disinterested, unbiased and impartial.
- Light whisky is stored in seasoned charred oak casks, which impart little colour or flavour.
- But the combination of natural materials imparts warmth to the space, which is comfortably scaled.