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purport

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purport

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++朗文当代英语 5++LDOCE 5++朗文 5++pur·port1 /pɜːˈpɔːt $ pɜːrˈpɔːrt/ verb [intransitive, transitive]  formalSAY/STATE to claim to be or do something, even if this is not true 声称是,据称是,像是purport to do something Two undercover officers purporting to be dealers infiltrated the gang. 两位伪装成毒贩的警员打入了那个团伙。be purported to be something The document is purported to be 300 years old. 这份文献据称已有300年历史。purportedly adverb a portrait purportedly of Shakespeare 一幅据说是莎士比亚的肖像画→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
purportWolfgang von Goethe, recently liberated from his university studies of law, visited Ensisheim in 1771 to see the purported meteorite.Clearing the house after a relative died, I came across what purports to be a passport to Hay-on-Wye.It is true that this model does not purport to describe accurately the way in which the market economy actually functions.Wasn't Rune Christensen as much a player of games as the man he purported to despise?Such books purport to present the past ` as it was', taking for granted that this is what photographs do.The relationship between an image and the reality it purports to represent is, according to many contemporary critics, inherently political.purport to do somethingWhile purporting to adhere to precedent, the joint opinion instead revises it.The book consisted of eighteen chapters; each defended his actions in what purported to be his own words.Wasn't Rune Christensen as much a player of games as the man he purported to despise?To the extent that it purports to do anything else, I respectfully dissent.Examination of the theories which purport to provide an answer to this question is none the less important for a number of reasons.However, in so far as it purports to strengthen that belief, the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act is to be welcomed.That rule does not purport to subject Winchester to the Rules.They have always been unseemly, since they make a mockery of the moral values they purport to uphold.
pur·port2 /ˈpɜːpɔːt, -pət $ ˈpɜːrpɔːrt/ noun [uncountable]  formalMEANING the general meaning of what someone says 〔某人言论的〕大意,主旨
Examples from the Corpus
purportWhy then did she not inform herself of the purport and effect of the transfer before signing it?The purport of his remarks is already familiar.The purport of that attack was to prove that generality could never be an intrinsic property of a mental content.
Origin purport2 (1400-1500) Anglo-French purporter to contain, from Old French, from porter to carry
be to Corpus claim or to do


purport
I
purport1 /pɜːˈpɔːt $ pɜːrˈpɔːrt/ verb [intransitive and transitive]
formal to claim to be or do something, even if this is not true
    purport to do something
    Two undercover officers purporting to be dealers infiltrated the gang.
    be purported to be something
    The document is purported to be 300 years old.
—purportedly adverb:
    a portrait purportedly of Shakespeare

II
purport2 /ˈpɜːpɔːt, -pət $ ˈpɜːrpɔːrt/ noun [uncountable]
 Date: 1400-1500
 Language: Anglo-French
 Origin: purporter 'to contain', from Old French, from porter 'to carry'
formal the general meaning of what someone says


pur·port verbpresent simple - I / you / we / they purport BrE /pəˈpɔːt/ 🔊 NAmE /pərˈpɔːrt/ 🔊present simple - he / she / it purports BrE /pəˈpɔːts/ 🔊 NAmE /pərˈpɔːrts/ 🔊past simple purported BrE /pəˈpɔːtɪd/ 🔊 NAmE /pərˈpɔːrtɪd/ 🔊past participle purported BrE /pəˈpɔːtɪd/ 🔊 NAmE /pərˈpɔːrtɪd/ 🔊 -ing form purporting BrE /pəˈpɔːtɪŋ/ 🔊 NAmE /pərˈpɔːrtɪŋ/ 🔊BrE /pəˈpɔːt/ 🔊NAmE /pərˈpɔːrt/ 🔊~ to be/have sth (formal) to claim to be sth or to have done sth, when this may not be true 自称;标榜 SYN profess The book does not purport to be a complete history of the period. 本书无意标榜为那个时期的全史。🔊🔊
pur·port nounBrE /ˈpɜːpɔːt/ 🔊NAmE /ˈpɜːrpɔːrt/ 🔊 [singular] the ~ of sth (formal) the general meaning of sth 主要意思;大意;主旨