familiar by use or study (usually followed by with): conversant with Spanish history.
Archaic. having regular or frequent conversation; intimately associating; acquainted.
Origin of conversant
1250–1300; Middle English conversa(u)nt<Latin conversant- (stem of conversāns), present participle of conversārī to associate with. See converse1, -ant
Haile is, simply put, one of the most charming and well-connected people in the business, the rare executive conversant in the boardroom and on Media Twitter.
Inside Tony Haile’s expedition to (help) save the news business |Steven Perlberg|July 27, 2020|Digiday
He is as conversant with HTML and Git as with metaphor and the twists and turns of plotting.
Vikram Chandra Is A Novelist Who's Obsessed With Writing Computer Code|Jane Ciabattari|August 29, 2014|DAILY BEAST
But they dug into the details, and their audiences expected them to be conversant in details.
Candidates the GOP Deserves|Michael Tomasky|November 4, 2011|DAILY BEAST
He speaks both for officials and for Europeans conversant with India.
New Ideas in India During the Nineteenth Century|John Morrison
Science, therefore, is conversant with truth, but opinion with generation.
Arguments Of Celsus, Porphyry, And The Emperor Julian, Against The Christians|Thomas Taylor
This is the business of our courts of equity, which however are only conversant in matters of property.
Commentaries on the Laws of England|William Blackstone
And verily, if men were conversant courtiers in Heaven, they would cry out with Paul, Rom.
The Sin and Danger of Self-Love|Robert Cushman
Ben, who was not so conversant as his cousin in the ways of cooks and gentlemen's servants, made no reply to these observations.
The Parent's Assistant|Maria Edgeworth
British Dictionary definitions for conversant
conversant
/ (kənˈvɜːsənt) /
adjective
(usually postpositive and foll by with) experienced (in), familiar (with), or acquainted (with)