convey
verb /kənˈveɪ/
  /kənˈveɪ/
Verb Forms
| present simple I / you / we / they convey |    /kənˈveɪ/   /kənˈveɪ/  | 
| he / she / it conveys |    /kənˈveɪz/   /kənˈveɪz/  | 
| past simple conveyed |    /kənˈveɪd/   /kənˈveɪd/  | 
| past participle conveyed |    /kənˈveɪd/   /kənˈveɪd/  | 
| -ing form conveying |    /kənˈveɪɪŋ/   /kənˈveɪɪŋ/  | 
- to make ideas, feelings, etc. known to somebody synonym communicate
- convey something Colours like red convey a sense of energy and strength.
 - convey something to somebody (formal) Please convey my apologies to your wife.
 - convey how, what, etc… He tried desperately to convey how urgent the situation was.
 - convey that… She did not wish to convey that they were all at fault.
 
Extra Examples- He managed to convey his enthusiasm to her.
 - The novel vividly conveys the experience of growing up during the war.
 
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- clearly
 - perfectly
 - powerfully
 - …
 
- can
 - could
 - try to
 - …
 
- to
 
 - convey somebody/something (from…) (to…) (formal) to take, carry or transport somebody/something from one place to another
- Pipes convey hot water from the boiler to the radiators.
 - A carriage was waiting to convey her home.
 
Extra Examples- Flowers from the Isles of Scilly were conveyed by steamer to Penzance.
 - Pipes convey hot water to the radiators.
 - The stone was conveyed by river to the site.
 
 
Word OriginMiddle English (in the sense ‘escort’; compare with convoy): from Old French conveier, from medieval Latin conviare, from con- ‘together’ + Latin via ‘way’.