purport
verbEtymology
From Middle English purporten, from Anglo-Norman purporter and Old French porporter (“convey, contain, carry”), from pur-, from Latin pro (“forth”) + Old French porter (“carry”), from Latin portō (“carry”).
Definitions
To convey, imply, or profess (often falsely or inaccurately).
- He purports himself to be an international man of affairs.
- The intermediate station seen here, Llanbister Road, is 5 hilly miles by road from the town it purports to serve.
To intend.
- He purported to become an international man of affairs.
- In all cases, however, although micronations may purport to assert sovereignty in any number of ways, they remain conceptually distinct from recognised sovereign states.
Import, intention or purpose.
- My practice, you say, refutes my doubts. But you mistake the purport of my question.
- Sorrowful, phantasmal as this same Double Aristocracy of Teachers and Governors now looks, it is worth all men’s while to know that the purport of it is, and remains, noble and most real.
- A child’s brain starts functioning at birth; and has, amongst its many infant convolutions, thousands of dormant atoms, into which God has put a mystic possibility for noticing an adult’s act, and figuring out its purport.
›+ 1 more definitionshow fewer
A disguise
A disguise; a covering.
- For she her sex under that strange purport / Did use to hide.
The neighborhood
Derived
Vish — recursive loop
A definitional loop anchored at purport. Each word in the ring is defined by the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself. Scroll to it and watch.
A definitional loop anchored at purport. Each word in the ring appears in the definition of the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself.
10 hops · closes at purport
curated · pre-corpus. live cycle detection across the full graph is the next major milestone.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA