The explorers sought to impart their knowledge of technology upon the uncivilized villagers.
"Impart your wisdom to me, O wise one."
The word impart is a verb. The professor was hoping to impart a tremendous amount of knowledge to his students in a short period of time.
what is the sentence for the word precation
Obviously you are not capable of using a word in a sentence!
This example sentence uses the word 'sentence' in an exemplary fashion.
"Impart your wisdom to me, O wise one."
To impart knowledge, I'm answering your question.Verne has endeavored to impart only what is known to exist.Our history professor tried to impart some of his wisdom to us.
The word impart is a verb. The professor was hoping to impart a tremendous amount of knowledge to his students in a short period of time.
If the movie has anything to impart, it's that parents shouldn't aim for perfection.
To transfer,impart or give something
impart
Impart is a fancy word for "give." Imparted then means gave, past tense.
A verb for intellect is impart. As in "to impart your knowledge". Assert or sharpen can also be used as verbs for intellect.
impart to
"Can the answer you impart" is grammatical but it does not follow normal syntactical rules. It would be correct to say: "Can you impart the answer?" In English, you invert a sentence to make it a question, by pulling the verb out - usually the helping (auxiliary) verb* - and putting it at the beginning. In this case the sentence, before it's inverted, is "You can impart the answer." When you invert it, you pull out the helping verb "can" and take it to the beginning: "Can you impart the answer?" However, "Can the answer you impart?" can also work as a sentence, just not a normal one; you're really only likely to find it in poetry, where you can rearrange things in different ways to fit your words to your chosen syllable patterns. In this case, the person writing the sentence has, first (before inverting the statement into a question), switched the word order of the original statement to "The answer you can impart." This just means "You can impart the answer," but the person put "the answer" at the beginning. You can do that - you can put the object of a sentence at the beginning - but it doesn't happen in normal speech, so if you do it in poetry, it usually means you're desperate to get the right words into the rhythm you want, and can't come up with any other way to do it. So it's sometimes frowned upon. Anyhow, after rearranging it that way, they inverted it as you would invert any question: by taking the main verb to the beginning - "Can the answer you impart?" Another example of this poetical rearrangement of words can be found in "The Raven": "Not the least obeisance made he; not a minute stopped or stayed he..." In more normal-people language, this means "He made not the least obeisance [courtesy]; he stopped or stayed not a minute...". Also, Yoda did this sort of thing all the time. *Even if there isn't an auxiliary verb in the original sentence, in English you still pull one out - you just have to add one first. So, "They shoot canoes" becomes "They do shoot canoes" becomes "Do they shoot canoes?". This is tricky for people learning English from other languages.
A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE
a sentence with the word variety