trans·mit
Transmit (something) to (someone or something) 1. To send or dispatch something to someone, something, or some place. You must transmit this package to the consulate as soon as possible. Find 57 ways to say TRANSMIT, along with antonyms, related words, and example sentences at Thesaurus.com, the world's most trusted free thesaurus.
(trăns-mĭt′, trănz-)v.tr.transmit
(trænzˈmɪt) vb, -mits, -mittingor-mittedtrans•mit
(trænsˈmɪt, trænz-)v. -mit•ted, -mit•ting.v.t.
To Transmit
5.transmit
Past participle: transmitted
Gerund: transmitting
Imperative |
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transmit |
transmit |
Present |
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I transmit |
you transmit |
he/she/it transmits |
we transmit |
you transmit |
they transmit |
Preterite |
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I transmitted |
you transmitted |
he/she/it transmitted |
we transmitted |
you transmitted |
they transmitted |
Present Continuous |
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I am transmitting |
you are transmitting |
he/she/it is transmitting |
we are transmitting |
you are transmitting |
they are transmitting |
Present Perfect |
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I have transmitted |
you have transmitted |
he/she/it has transmitted |
we have transmitted |
you have transmitted |
they have transmitted |
Past Continuous |
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I was transmitting |
you were transmitting |
he/she/it was transmitting |
we were transmitting |
you were transmitting |
they were transmitting |
Past Perfect |
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I had transmitted |
you had transmitted |
he/she/it had transmitted |
we had transmitted |
you had transmitted |
they had transmitted |
Future |
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I will transmit |
you will transmit |
he/she/it will transmit |
we will transmit |
you will transmit |
they will transmit |
Future Perfect |
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I will have transmitted |
you will have transmitted |
he/she/it will have transmitted |
we will have transmitted |
you will have transmitted |
they will have transmitted |
Future Continuous |
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I will be transmitting |
you will be transmitting |
he/she/it will be transmitting |
we will be transmitting |
you will be transmitting |
they will be transmitting |
Present Perfect Continuous |
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I have been transmitting |
you have been transmitting |
he/she/it has been transmitting |
we have been transmitting |
you have been transmitting |
they have been transmitting |
Future Perfect Continuous |
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I will have been transmitting |
you will have been transmitting |
he/she/it will have been transmitting |
we will have been transmitting |
you will have been transmitting |
they will have been transmitting |
Past Perfect Continuous |
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I had been transmitting |
you had been transmitting |
he/she/it had been transmitting |
we had been transmitting |
you had been transmitting |
they had been transmitting |
Conditional |
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I would transmit |
you would transmit |
he/she/it would transmit |
we would transmit |
you would transmit |
they would transmit |
Past Conditional |
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I would have transmitted |
you would have transmitted |
he/she/it would have transmitted |
we would have transmitted |
you would have transmitted |
they would have transmitted |
Verb | 1. | transmit - transfer to another; 'communicate a disease' communicate, pass along, put across, pass on, pass - transmit information ; 'Please communicate this message to all employees'; 'pass along the good news' transfer - move from one place to another; 'transfer the data'; 'transmit the news'; 'transfer the patient to another hospital' |
2. | transmit - transmit or serve as the medium for transmission; 'Sound carries well over water'; 'The airwaves carry the sound'; 'Many metals conduct heat' convey, express, carry - serve as a means for expressing something; 'The painting of Mary carries motherly love'; 'His voice carried a lot of anger' bring, convey, take - take something or somebody with oneself somewhere; 'Bring me the box from the other room'; 'Take these letters to the boss'; 'This brings me to the main point' wash up - carry somewhere (of water or current or waves); 'The tide washed up the corpse' pipe in - bring in through pipes; 'Music was piped into the offices' bring in - transmit; 'The microphone brought in the sounds from the room next to mine' carry - be conveyed over a certain distance; 'Her voice carries very well in this big opera house' | |
3. | transmit - broadcast over the airwaves, as in radio or television; 'We cannot air this X-rated song' broadcast medium, broadcasting - a medium that disseminates via telecommunications publicize, bare, publicise, air - make public; 'She aired her opinions on welfare' satellite - broadcast or disseminate via satellite telecast, televise - broadcast via television; 'The Royal wedding was televised' interrogate - transmit (a signal) for setting off an appropriate response, as in telecommunication rebroadcast, rerun - broadcast again, as of a film | |
4. | transmit - send from one person or place to another; 'transmit a message' channel, channelise, channelize, transport, transfer fetch, bring, get, convey - go or come after and bring or take back; 'Get me those books over there, please'; 'Could you bring the wine?'; 'The dog fetched the hat' project - transfer (ideas or principles) from one domain into another propagate - transmit; 'propagate sound or light through air' release, turn - let (something) fall or spill from a container; 'turn the flour onto a plate' send out, send - to cause or order to be taken, directed, or transmitted to another place; 'He had sent the dispatches downtown to the proper people and had slept' move, displace - cause to move or shift into a new position or place, both in a concrete and in an abstract sense; 'Move those boxes into the corner, please'; 'I'm moving my money to another bank'; 'The director moved more responsibilities onto his new assistant' |
transmit
verbtransmit
verbtransmit
[trænzˈmɪt]VT [+ illness, programme, message] → transmitir (to a)transmit
[trænzˈmɪt]vttransmit
transmit
[trænzˈmɪt]vt (illness, programme, message) → trasmetteretransmit
(trӕnzˈmit) – past tense, past participle transˈmitted – verbtransmit
transmit
vt (pret & pp-mitted; ger-mitting) transmitirTransmit Crossword Clue
Feb. 11 (UPI) -- Children and young people are less likely to catch COVID-19 and spread the virus to others compared to adults, an analysis published Thursday by PLOS Computational Biology found.
The mathematical modeling of virus transmission within households found that people age 20 and younger were 43% 'as susceptible' to COVID-19 compared to those older than 20, the data showed.
The data also showed that people 20 and younger have viral loads -- the amount of coronavirus in their bodies -- estimated at 63% lower than what adults carry, which affects the likelihood they are to spread COVID-19 to others.
This may explain why children are more likely than adults to receive a negative test result, despite being infected with the virus, and why fewer children than adults are diagnosed with the disease, according the researchers.
The findings also could be used to inform decisions regarding whether to open schools during the pandemic, they said.
'Understanding children's role in transmission was a top priority, in connection with the question of reopening schools,' study co-author Itai Dattner, a professor of statistics at the University of Haifa in Israel, said in a statement.
For the new study, researchers applied mathematical and statistical models of virus transmission within households to a dataset of COVID-19 testing results from the city of Bnei Brak, Israel.
To Transmit Data From One Computer To Another
The dataset covered 637 households, the residents of which underwent testing for active COVID-19 infection in spring 2020.
The study's results, showing lower viral loads in younger people, likely means that they are at lower risk for spreading the virus, researchers said.
The role of children in the spread of COVID-19 has been a source of controversy since the start of the pandemic.
Historically, children have been significant spreaders of respiratory virus but, at least to date, research assessing how contagious they are when infected with COVID-19 has yielded mixed results.
Spread in schools in the United States, however, has been much lower compared to the surrounding community, according to data released recently by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
'It's not whether or not kids are going to get infected. ... [it's] can we put them in an environment where there are guidance and rules in place to help prevent transmission at really high rates?' pediatrician Dr. Kanecia Obie Zimmerman said during a call with reporters this week.
To Transmit Power
'I don't think schools necessarily need to shut down if there's one case that comes into the building or a couple of cases,' said Zimmerman, an associate professor of pediatrics at Duke University, who was not involved in the Israeli study.