English to Spanish Dictionary impart

impart

impartir
definition
verb
teachers had a duty to impart strong morals to their students
make (information) known; communicate.
translation of 'impart'
verb
impartir,
comunicar
example
teachers had a duty to 'impart' strong morals to their students
its main use has been to 'impart' a high surface gloss to finished articles
While these definitions 'impart' a flavour of the concept, they are extremely vague.
A few Red Clover blossoms in a pot of any tea 'impart' a nice honey flavor.
Further, it should have full control over the institutions which 'impart' training.
It is a gangster film with darkened images meant to 'impart' an art-house quality.
The banana leaves and warm earth 'impart' a special flavor to the food.
They also 'impart' knowledge to people newly diagnosed with diabetes, walking with them in empathy.
shiitake mushrooms 'impart' a wonderfully woody flavour to the salad
Good communication requires the ability both to listen and to 'impart' relevant information.
I have run out of " wisdom " to sagely 'impart' to my students.
Thus, this new definition of airflow obstruction appears to 'impart' useful prognostic information.
Then you'll 'impart' your newfound wisdom to local schoolchildren during nighttime field trips.
Your wonderful way of teaching and 'imparting' critical information is so helpful and inspiring.
I think that 'imparts' a bit of a club feel and helps with the vibe.
In sweaters, for example, the blend's wool component retains body heat and 'imparts' thickness, while cotton makes it comfortable to wear.
The music in its patience and sense of perseverance 'imparts' a sense of sympathetic healing.
The 'impartation' of saving grace is ultimately the only eternal benefit.
I find myself sometimes wishing for a supernatural 'impartation' of wisdom to my children, especially but not exclusively to my three sons.
New oak 'imparts' distinct flavour compounds to a wine.
Whether ethylene 'imparts' a capacity or capability in the mechanisms of graviperception or in the components of signal transduction or response pathways cannot be established by the experiments reported.
This work 'imparts' seminal information on the use of biological and chemical weapons in the ancient world, and as such it provides an outlook missing from much current thought about this era.
Computer education is also 'imparted' to the children.
And he 'imparts' some wisdom that seems to have resonance beyond the craps table.
Urdu education was 'imparted' to students in these institutions along with religious education.
I wonder where she stands on responsibility for 'imparting' information about wilful ignorance?
Hats, of course, were a key element in defining a fisherperson's on-stream image, 'imparting' a quality of costumed playacting to the sport of fly-fishing.
Visitors could also get a feel of the polytechnic education and the kind of training 'imparted' to the students.
However, I often receive information in what feels like physical 'impartation' : the revelation is ‘downloaded’ into my chest area.
Her face sets like quick-drying cement and she 'imparts' information strictly on a need-to-know basis.
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