con·vey·ance /kənˈveən(t)s/
  運輸,運輸工具,財產讓與
  conveyance
  運輸
  Con·vey·ance n.
  1. The act of conveying, carrying, or transporting; carriage.
     The long journey was to be performed on horseback, -- the only sure mode of conveyance.   --Prescott.
     Following the river downward, there is conveyance into the countries named in the text.   --Sir W. Raleigh.
  2. The instrument or means of carrying or transporting anything from place to place; the vehicle in which, or means by which, anything is carried from one place to another; as, stagecoaches, omnibuses, etc., are conveyances; a canal or aqueduct is a conveyance for water.
     These pipes and these conveyances of our blood.   --Shak.
  3. The act or process of transferring, transmitting, handing down, or communicating; transmission.
     Tradition is no infallible way of conveyance.   --Stillingfleet.
  4. Law The act by which the title to property, esp. real estate, is transferred; transfer of ownership; an instrument in writing (as a deed or mortgage), by which the title to property is conveyed from one person to another.
     [He] found the conveyances in law to be so firm, that in justice he must decree the land to the earl.   --Clarendon.
  5. Dishonest management, or artifice. [Obs.]
     the very Jesuits themselves . . . can not possibly devise any juggling conveyance how to shift it off.   --Hakewill.
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  conveyance
       n 1: document effecting a property transfer
       2: the transmission of information [syn: imparting, impartation]
       3: something that serves as a means of transportation [syn: transport]
       4: act of transferring property title from one person to
          another [syn: conveyance of title, conveyancing, conveying]
       5: the act of transporting something from one location to
          another [syn: transportation, transfer, transferral]