conduct
[ noun kon-duhkt; verb kuhn-duhkt ]
/ noun ˈkɒn dʌkt; verb kənˈdʌkt /
noun
verb (used with object)
verb (used without object)
to lead.
to act as conductor, or leader of a musical group, by communicating to the performers by motions of a baton or the hands his or her interpretation of the music.
Origin of conduct
SYNONYMS FOR conduct
OTHER WORDS FROM conduct
Words nearby conduct
Example sentences from the Web for conductibility
The difference evidently depends on the conductibility of certain rocks.
A Journey to the Centre of the Earth |Jules VerneThus each degree of conductibility corresponds during the time of a storm to a certain degree of danger.
Thunder and Lightning |Camille Flammarion
British Dictionary definitions for conductibility
conduct
noun (ˈkɒndʌkt)
verb (kənˈdʌkt)
Derived forms of conduct
conductible, adjective conductibility, nounWord Origin for conduct
C15: from Medieval Latin
conductus escorted, from Latin: drawn together, from
condūcere to
conduce
Medical definitions for conductibility
conduct
[ kən-dŭkt′ ]
v.
To act as a medium for conveying something such as heat or electricity.
n.
The way a person acts, especially from the standpoint of morality.