Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary · 1913

Import

Import , transitive verb

[Latin importare to bring in, to occasion, to cause; pref. im- in + portare to bear. Sense 3 comes through French importer, from the Latin. See Port demeanor.]

1.
To bring in from abroad; to introduce from without; especially, to bring (wares or merchandise) into a place or country from a foreign country, in the transactions of commerce; -- opposed to export. We import teas from China, coffee from Brazil, etc.
2.
To carry or include, as meaning or intention; to imply; to signify.
Every petition... doth... always import a multitude of speakers together. — Hooker
3.
To be of importance or consequence to; to have a bearing on; to concern.
I have a motion much imports your good. — Shakespeare
If I endure it, what imports it you? — Dryden

Import , intransitive verb

To signify; to purport; to be of moment.
For that... importeth to the work. — Bacon

Import , noun

1.
Merchandise imported, or brought into a country from without its boundaries; -- generally in the plural, opposed to exports.
I take the imports from, and not the exports to, these conquests, as the measure of these advantages which we derived from them. — Burke
2.
That which a word, phrase, or document contains as its signification or intention or interpretation of a word, action, event, and the like.
3.
Importance; weight; consequence.
Most serious design, and the great import. — Shakespeare