释义 |
communicating
com·mu·ni·cate C0517800 (kə-myo͞o′nĭ-kāt′)v. com·mu·ni·cat·ed, com·mu·ni·cat·ing, com·mu·ni·cates v.tr.1. a. To convey information about; make known; impart: communicated his views to our office.b. To reveal clearly; manifest: Her disapproval communicated itself in her frown.2. To spread (a disease, for example) to others; transmit: a carrier who communicated typhus.v.intr.1. To have an interchange, as of ideas.2. To express oneself in such a way that one is readily and clearly understood: "That ability to communicate was strange in a man given to long, awkward silences" (Anthony Lewis).3. Ecclesiastical To receive Communion.4. To be connected, one with another: apartments that communicate. [Latin commūnicāre, commūnicāt-, from commūnis, common; see mei- in Indo-European roots.]communicating (kəˈmjuːnɪˌkeɪtɪŋ) adjmaking or having a direct connection from one room to another: the suite is made up of three communicating rooms. ThesaurusNoun | 1. | communicating - the activity of communicating; the activity of conveying information; "they could not act without official communication from Moscow"communicationhuman action, human activity, act, deed - something that people do or cause to happentransmission - communication by means of transmitted signalsintercommunication - mutual communication; communication with each other; "they intercepted intercommunication between enemy ships"medium - an intervening substance through which signals can travel as a means for communicationcommunication channel, channel, line - (often plural) a means of communication or access; "it must go through official channels"; "lines of communication were set up between the two firms"mail service, postal service, mail, post - the system whereby messages are transmitted via the post office; "the mail handles billions of items every day"; "he works for the United States mail service"; "in England they call mail `the post'"dramatic art, dramaturgy, theater, theatre, dramatics - the art of writing and producing playsdiscussion, discourse, treatment - an extended communication (often interactive) dealing with some particular topic; "the book contains an excellent discussion of modal logic"; "his treatment of the race question is badly biased"exhortation - a communication intended to urge or persuade the recipients to take some actionverbal expression, verbalism, expression - the communication (in speech or writing) of your beliefs or opinions; "expressions of good will"; "he helped me find verbal expression for my ideas"; "the idea was immediate but the verbalism took hours"exam, examination, test - a set of questions or exercises evaluating skill or knowledge; "when the test was stolen the professor had to make a new set of questions"persuasion, suasion - the act of persuading (or attempting to persuade); communication intended to induce belief or actiondissuasion - persuading not to do or believe something; talking someone out of a belief or an intended course of actionexpostulation, objection, remonstrance, remonstration - the act of expressing earnest opposition or protesttouch, contact - a communicative interaction; "the pilot made contact with the base"; "he got in touch with his colleagues"traffic - the amount of activity over a communication system during a given period of time; "heavy traffic overloaded the trunk lines"; "traffic on the internet is lightest during the night" | TranslationscomunicanteкоммуницированиеIdiomsSeecommunicateEncyclopediaSeecommunicationLegalSeeCommunicationcommunicating Related to communicating: Communicating Vessels, Communication skillsSynonyms for communicatingnoun the activity of communicatingSynonymsRelated Words- human action
- human activity
- act
- deed
- transmission
- intercommunication
- medium
- communication channel
- channel
- line
- mail service
- postal service
- mail
- post
- dramatic art
- dramaturgy
- theater
- theatre
- dramatics
- discussion
- discourse
- treatment
- exhortation
- verbal expression
- verbalism
- expression
- exam
- examination
- test
- persuasion
- suasion
- dissuasion
- expostulation
- objection
- remonstrance
- remonstration
- touch
- contact
- traffic
|