VS.

Transceive vs. Transmit

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Transceiveverb

(of a communications device) To both transmit and receive

Transmitverb

(transitive) To send or convey something from one person, place or thing to another.

Transmitverb

(transitive) To spread or pass on something such as a disease or a signal.

Transmitverb

(transitive) To impart, convey or hand down something by inheritance or heredity.

Transmitverb

(transitive) To communicate news or information.

Transmitverb

(transitive) To convey energy or force through a mechanism or medium.

Transmitverb

(intransitive) To send out a signal (as opposed to receive).

Transmitverb

To cause to pass over or through; to communicate by sending; to send from one person or place to another; to pass on or down as by inheritance; as, to transmit a memorial; to transmit dispatches; to transmit money, or bills of exchange, from one country to another.

‘The ancientest fathers must be next removed, as Clement of Alexandria, and that Eusebian book of evangelic preparation, transmitting our ears through a hoard of heathenish obscenities to receive the gospel.’; ‘The scepter of that kingdom continued to be transmitted in the dynasty of Castile.’;

Transmitverb

To suffer to pass through; as, glass transmits light; metals transmit, or conduct, electricity.

Transmitverb

transfer to another;

‘communicate a disease’;

Transmitverb

transmit or serve as the medium for transmission;

‘Sound carries well over water’; ‘The airwaves carry the sound’; ‘Many metals conduct heat’;

Transmitverb

broadcast over the airwaves, as in radio or television;

‘We cannot air this X-rated song’;

Transmitverb

send from one person or place to another;

‘transmit a message’;

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