English-Thai Dictionary
conduct
N การ จัดการ mange kan-jad-kan
conduct
N ความประพฤติ behavior kwam-pra-pharued
conduct
VI นำ nam
conduct
VT จัดการ ควบคุม direct manage control jad-kan
conduct
VT นำ นำ ให้ ดู นำ ให้ ทำตาม nam
conduct
VT ประพฤติ behave pra-pharued
conduct away
PHRV บังคับ ให้ ออก ไป นำ ออก ไป conduct out bang-kab-hai-ook-pai
conduct out
PHRV บังคับ ให้ ออก ไป นำ ออก ไป conduct away bang-kab-hai-ook-pai
conductance
N ความสามารถ ใน การนำ ไฟฟ้า
conductibility
N การ จัดการ การ ควบคุม management guidance kan-jad-kan
conductible
ADJ ที่ จัดการ ที่ ควบคุม ti-jad-kan
conduction
N การ เป็น สื่อ นำ transmission kan-pen-sue-nam
conductive
ADJ ที่ สามารถ เป็น สื่อ นำ พลังงาน ได้ ti-sa-mad-pen-sue-nam-pa-lang-ngan-dai
conductivity
N คุณ สมบัติ ใน การ สื่อ นำ พลังงาน ได้ kun-na-som-bad-nai-kan-sue-nam-pa-lang-ngan-dai
conductor
N ผู้ควบคุม ผู้ทำ ผู้จัดการ manager guide leader phu-kuab-kum
conductor
N ผู้ควบคุม วงดนตรี orchestra leader director phu-kuab-kum-wong-don-tri
conductress
N ผู้นำ วงดนตรี ที่ เป็น ผู้หญิง female conductor phu-nam-wong-don-tri-ti-pen-pu-ying
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
CONDUCT
n.[L., to lead. See Duke. ] 1. Literally, the act of leading; guidance; command. So Waller has used it.
Conduct of armies is a princes art.
2. The act of convoying, or guarding; guidance or brining along under protection.
3. Guard on the way; convoy; escort.
[These senses are now unusual, though not improper. ]
4. In a general sense, personal behavior; course of actions; deportment; applicable equally to a good or a bad course of actions; as laudable conduct; detestable conduct. The word seems originally to have been followed with life, actions, affairs, or other term; as the conduct of life; the conduct of actions; that is, the leading along of life or actions.
Young men in the conduct and manage of actions embrace more than they can hold.
What in the conduct of our life appears.
But by custom, conduct alone is now used to express the idea of behavior or course of life and manners.
5. Exact behavior; regular life. [Unusual. ]
6. Management; mode of carrying on.
Christianity has humanized the conduct of war.
7. The title of two clergymen appointed to read prayers at Eton College in England.
CONDUCT
v.t. 1. To lead; to bring along; to guide; to accompany and show the way.
And Judah came to Gilgal--to conduct the king over Jordan. 2 Samuel 19:15.
2. To lead; to direct or point out the way.
The precepts of Christ will conduct us to happiness.
3. To lead; to usher in; to introduce; to attend in civility.
Pray receive them nobly, and conduct them into our presence.
4. To give a direction to; to manage; applied to things; as, the farmer conducts his affairs with prudence.
5. To lead, as a commander; to direct; to govern; to command; as, to conduct an army or a division of troops.
6. With the reciprocal pronoun, to conduct ones self, is to behave. Hence, by a customary omission of the pronoun, to conduct, in an intransitive sense, is to behave; to direct personal actions. [See the noun. ]
7. To escort; to accompany and protect on the way.
CONDUCTED
pp. Led; guided; directed; introduced; commanded; managed.
CONDUCTING
ppr. Leading; escorting; introducing; commanding; behaving; managing.
CONDUCTION
n. 1. The act of training up. [Not in use. ]
2. Transmission through or by means of a conductor.
CONDUCTITIOUS
a.[L., to hire. ] Hired; employed for wages.
CONDUCTOR
n. 1. A leader; a guide; one who goes before or accompanies, and shows the way.
2. A chief; a commander; one who leads an army or a people.
3. A director; a manager.
4. In surgery, an instrument which serves to direct the knife in cutting for the stone, and in laying up sinuses and fistulas; also, a machine to secure a fractured limb.
5. In electrical experiments, any body that receives and communicates electricity; such as metals and moist substances. Bodies which repel it, or into which it will not pass, are called non-conductors. Hence,
6. A metallic rod erected by buildings or in ships, to conduct lightning to the earth or water, and protect the building from its effects.
CONDUCTRESS
n.A female who leads or directs; a directress.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
CONDUCT
Con "duct, n. Etym: [LL. conductus defense, escort, fr. L. conductus, p. p. of conducere. See Conduce, and cf. Conduit. ]
1. The act or method of conducting; guidance; management. Christianity has humanized the conduct of war. Paley. The conduct of the state, the administration of its affairs. Ld. Brougham.
2. Skillful guidance or management; generalship. Conduct of armies is a prince's art. Waller. Attacked the Spaniards... with great impetuosity, but with so little conduct, that his forces were totally routed. Robertson.
3. Convoy; escort; guard; guide. [Archaic ] I will be your conduct. B. Jonson. In my conduct shall your ladies come. Shak.
4. That which carries or conveys anything; a channel; a conduit; an instrument. [Obs. ] Although thou been conduct of my chame. Shak.
5. The manner of guiding or carrying one's self; personal deportment; mode of action; behavior. All these difficulties were increased by the conduct of Shrewsbury. Macaulay. What in the conduct of our life appears So well designed, so luckily begun, But when we have our wish, we wish undone Dryden.
6. Plot; action; construction; manner of development. The book of Job, in conduct and diction. Macaulay. Conduct money (Naut. ), a portion of a seaman's wages retained till the end of his engagement, and paid over only if his conduct has been satisfactory.
Syn. -- Behavior; deportment; demeanor; bearing; management; guidance. See Behavior.
CONDUCT
Con *duct ", v. t. [imp. & p. p. Conducted; p. pr. & vb. n.Conducting. ] Etym: [See Conduct, n.]
1. To lead, or guide; to escort; to attend. I can conduct you, lady, to a low But loyal cottage, where you may be safe. Milton.
2. To lead, as a commander; to direct; to manage; to carry on; as, to conduct the affairs of a kingdom. Little skilled in the art of conducting a siege. Prescott.
3. To behave; -- with the reflexive; as, he conducted himself well.
4. (Physics )
Defn: To serve as a medium for conveying; to transmit, as heat, light, electricity, etc.
5. (Mus. )
Defn: To direct, as the leader in the performance of a musical composition.
CONDUCT
CONDUCT Con *duct ", v. i.
1. To act as a conductor (as of heat, electricity, etc. ); to carry.
2. To conduct one's self; to behave. [U. S.]
CONDUCTANCE
CONDUCTANCE Con *duct "ance (kon *duk "tans ), n. [Conduct, v. + -ance. ] (Elec.)
Defn: Conducting power; -- the reciprocal of resistance. A suggested unit is the mho, the reciprocal of the ohm.
Conductance is an attribute of any specified conductor, and refers to its shape, length, and other factors. Conductivity is an attribute of any specified material without direct reference to its shape or other factors.Sloane's Elec. Dict.
CONDUCTIBILITY
Con *duct `i *bil "i *ty, n. Etym: [Cf. F. conductibilité. ]
1. Capability of being conducted; as, the conductibility of heat or electricity.
2. Conductivity; capacity for receiving and transmitting.
CONDUCTIBLE
CONDUCTIBLE Con *duct "i *ble, a.
Defn: Capable of being conducted.
CONDUCTION
Con *duc "tion, n. Etym: [L. conductio a bringing together: cf. F.conduction. ]
1. The act of leading or guiding. Sir W. Raleigh.
2. The act of training up. [Obs. ] B. Jonson.
3. (Physics )
Defn: Transmission through, or by means of, a conductor; also, conductivity. [The ] communication [of heat ] from one body to another when they are in contact, or through a homogenous body from particle to particle, constitutes conduction. Amer. Cyc.
CONDUCTIVE
CONDUCTIVE Con *duct "ive, a.
Defn: Having the quality or power of conducting; as, the conductive tissue of a pistil. The ovarian walls... are seen to be distinctly conductive. Goodale (Gray's Bot. ).
CONDUCTIVITY
CONDUCTIVITY Con `duc *tiv "i *ty, n.
Defn: The quality or power of conducting, or of receiving and transmitting, as, the conductivity of a nerve. Thermal conductivity (Physics ), the quantity of heat that passes in unit time through unit area of plate whose thickness is unity, when its opposite faces differ in temperature by one degree. J. D. Everett. -- Thermometic conductivity (Physics ), the thermal conductivity when the unit of heat employed is the heat required to raise unit volume of the substance one degree.
CONDUCTOR
Con *duct "or, n. Etym: [LL. , a carrier, transporter, L., a lessee. ]
1. One who, or that which, conducts; a leader; a commander; a guide; a manager; a director. Zeal, the blind conductor of the will. Dryden.
2. One in charge of a public conveyance, as of a railroad train or a street car. [U. S.]
3. (Mus. )
Defn: The leader or director of an orchestra or chorus.
4. (Physics )
Defn: A substance or body capable of being a medium for the transmission of certain forces, esp. heat or electricity; specifically, a lightning rod.
5. (Surg.)
Defn: A grooved sound or staff used for directing instruments, as lithontriptic forceps, etc. ; a director.
6. (Arch. )
Defn: Same as Leader. Prime conductor (Elec.), the largest conductor of an electrical machine, serving to collect, accumulate, or retain the electricity.
CONDUCTORY
Con *duct "o *ry, a. Etym: [LL. conductorius.]
Defn: Having the property of conducting. [R.]
CONDUCTRESS
CONDUCTRESS Con *duct "ress, n.
Defn: A woman who leads or directs; a directress.
New American Oxford Dictionary
conduct
con duct ▶noun |ˈkänˌdəkt ˈkɑnˌdəkt | 1 the manner in which a person behaves, esp. on a particular occasion or in a particular context: the conduct of the police during the riot | members are bound by a code of conduct . 2 the action or manner of managing an activity or organization: his conduct of the campaign. • archaic the action of leading; guidance: traveling through the world under the conduct of chance. ▶verb |kənˈdəkt kənˈdəkt | [ with obj. ] 1 organize and carry out: in the second trial he conducted his own defense | surveys conducted among students. • direct the performance of (a piece of music or a musical ensemble ): my first attempt to conduct a great work | [ no obj. ] : Toscanini is coming to conduct. • lead or guide (someone ) to or around a particular place: he conducted us through his personal gallery of the Civil War. • Physics transmit (a form of energy such as heat or electricity ) by conduction: heat is conducted to the surface. 2 (conduct oneself ) behave in a specified way: he conducted himself with the utmost propriety. DERIVATIVES con duct i ble |kənˈdəktəbəl |adjective, con duct i bil i ty |kənˌdəktəˈbilitē |noun ORIGIN Middle English: from Old French, from Latin conduct- ‘brought together, ’ from the verb conducere. The term originally denoted some provision for safe passage, such as an escort or pass, surviving in safe conduct; later the verb sense ‘lead, guide ’ arose, hence ‘manage ’ and ‘management ’ (late Middle English ), later ‘management of oneself, behavior ’ (mid 16th cent ). The original form of the word was conduit, which was preserved only in the sense ‘channel ’ (see conduit ); in all other uses the spelling was influenced by Latin.
conductance
con duct ance |kənˈdəktəns kənˈdəktəns | ▶noun the degree to which an object conducts electricity, calculated as the ratio of the current that flows to the potential difference present. This is the reciprocal of the resistance, and is measured in siemens or mhos. (Symbol: G ).
conduct disorder
con duct dis or der ▶noun a range of antisocial types of behavior displayed in childhood or adolescence.
conduction
con duc tion |kənˈdəkSHən kənˈdəkʃən | ▶noun the process by which heat or electricity is directly transmitted through a substance when there is a difference of temperature or of electrical potential between adjoining regions, without movement of the material. • the process by which sound waves travel through a medium. • the transmission of impulses along nerves. • the conveying of fluid through a pipe or other channel. ORIGIN mid 16th cent. (in the senses ‘provision for safe passage ’ and ‘leadership ’): from Latin conductio (n- ), from the verb conducere (see conduct ).
conduction band
con duc tion band ▶noun Physics a delocalized band of energy partly filled with electrons in a crystalline solid. These electrons have great mobility and are responsible for electrical conductivity.
conductive
con duc tive |kənˈdəktiv kənˈdəktɪv | ▶adjective having the property of conducting something (esp. heat or electricity ): to induce currents in conductive coils. • of or relating to conduction. DERIVATIVES con duc tive ly adverb
conductive education
con |duct |ive edu |ca ¦tion ▶noun [ mass noun ] Brit. a system of training for people with motor disorders, especially children, which aims to reduce their dependence on artificial aids.
conductivity
con duc tiv i ty |ˌkänˌdəkˈtivitē, kən -ˌkɑndəkˈtɪvədi | ▶noun ( pl. conductivities ) (also electrical conductivity ) the degree to which a specified material conducts electricity, calculated as the ratio of the current density in the material to the electric field that causes the flow of current. It is the reciprocal of the resistivity. • (also thermal conductivity ) the rate at which heat passes through a specified material, expressed as the amount of heat that flows per unit time through a unit area with a temperature gradient of one degree per unit distance.
conductor
con duc tor |kənˈdəktər kənˈdəktər | ▶noun 1 a person who directs the performance of an orchestra or choir: he was appointed principal conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra. 2 a person in charge of a train, streetcar, or other public conveyance, who collects fares and sells tickets. 3 Physics a material or device that conducts or transmits heat, electricity, or sound, esp. when regarded in terms of its capacity to do this: graphite is a reasonably good conductor of electricity. • another term for lightning rod. DERIVATIVES con duc to ri al |ˌkänˌdəkˈtôrēəl, kən - |adjective, con duc tor ship |-ˌSHip |noun conductor ( sense 1 ) ORIGIN late Middle English (denoting a military leader ): via Old French from Latin conductor, from conducere ‘bring together ’ (see conduct ).
conductor rail
con |duct ¦or rail ▶noun a rail transmitting current to an electric train or other vehicle.
conductress
con duc tress |kənˈdəktrəs kənˈdəktrəs | ▶noun a female conductor, esp. in a bus or other passenger vehicle.
conduct sheet
con |duct sheet ▶noun a form used in schools and the armed forces to record someone's offences and punishments.
conductus
con duc tus |kənˈdəktəs kənˈdəktəs | ▶noun ( pl. conducti |-ˌtī, -ˌtē | ) a musical setting of a metrical Latin text, of the 12th or 13th century. ORIGIN from medieval Latin, from Latin conducere ‘bring together ’ (see conduct ).
Oxford Dictionary
conduct
con |duct ▶noun |ˈkɒndʌkt | [ mass noun ] 1 the manner in which a person behaves, especially in a particular place or situation: they were arrested for disorderly conduct | a code of conduct for directors of listed companies. 2 the manner in which an organization or activity is managed or directed: the conduct of the elections. • archaic the action of leading; guidance: travelling through the world under the conduct of chance. ▶verb |kənˈdʌkt | [ with obj. ] 1 organize and carry out: in the second trial he conducted his own defence | surveys conducted among students. 2 [ with obj. and adverbial of direction ] lead or guide (someone ) to or around a particular place: he conducted us through his personal gallery of the Civil War | (as adj. conducted ) : a conducted tour. 3 Physics transmit (a form of energy such as heat or electricity ) by conduction: heat is conducted to the surface. 4 direct the performance of (a piece of music or an orchestra, choir, etc. ): the concert is to be conducted by Sir Simon Rattle. 5 (conduct oneself ) behave in a specified way: he conducted himself with the utmost propriety. DERIVATIVES conductibility |kəndʌktɪˈbɪlɪti |noun, conductible |kənˈdʌktɪb (ə )l |adjective ORIGIN Middle English: from Old French, from Latin conduct- ‘brought together ’, from the verb conducere. The term originally denoted a provision for safe passage, surviving in safe conduct; later the verb sense ‘lead, guide ’ arose, hence ‘manage ’ and ‘management ’ (late Middle English ), later ‘management of oneself, behaviour ’ (mid 16th cent. ). The original form of the word was conduit, which was preserved only in the sense ‘channel ’ (see conduit ); in other uses the spelling was influenced by Latin.
conductance
con |duct |ance |kənˈdʌkt (ə )ns | ▶noun [ mass noun ] the degree to which an object conducts electricity, calculated as the ratio of the current which flows to the potential difference present. This is the reciprocal of the resistance, and is measured in siemens or mhos.
conduct disorder
con |duct dis |order ▶noun [ mass noun ] chiefly US a range of antisocial types of behaviour displayed in childhood or adolescence.
conduction
con |duc ¦tion |kənˈdʌkʃ (ə )n | ▶noun [ mass noun ] the process by which heat or electricity is directly transmitted through the material of a substance when there is a difference of temperature or of electrical potential between adjoining regions, without movement of the material. • the process by which sound waves travel through a medium. • the transmission of impulses along nerves. • the conveying of fluid through a channel. ORIGIN mid 16th cent. (in the senses ‘provision for safe passage ’ and ‘leadership ’): from Latin conductio (n- ), from the verb conducere (see conduct ).
conduction band
con |duc ¦tion band ▶noun Physics a delocalized band of energy levels in a crystalline solid which is partly filled with electrons. These electrons have great mobility and are responsible for electrical conductivity.
conductive
con |duct |ive |kənˈdʌktɪv | ▶adjective having the property of conducting something (especially heat or electricity ): a conductive material. • relating to conduction. DERIVATIVES conductively adverb
conductive education
con |duct |ive edu |ca ¦tion ▶noun [ mass noun ] Brit. a system of training for people with motor disorders, especially children, which aims to reduce their dependence on artificial aids.
conductivity
con |duct |iv ¦ity |kɒndʌkˈtɪvɪti | ▶noun ( pl. conductivities ) [ mass noun ] (also electrical conductivity ) the degree to which a specified material conducts electricity, calculated as the ratio of the current density in the material to the electric field which causes the flow of current. • (also thermal conductivity ) the rate at which heat passes through a specified material, expressed as the amount of heat that flows per unit time through a unit area with a temperature gradient of one degree per unit distance.
conductor
con |duct ¦or |kənˈdʌktə | ▶noun 1 a person who directs the performance of an orchestra or choir. 2 Brit. a person who collects fares and sells tickets on a bus. • N. Amer. a guard on a train. 3 Physics a material or device that conducts or transmits heat or electricity, especially when regarded in terms of its capacity to do this: most polymers are poor conductors. • short for lightning conductor. 4 Brit. a person who is trained to provide conductive education. DERIVATIVES conductorship noun conductor ( sense 1 ) ORIGIN late Middle English (denoting a military leader ): via Old French from Latin conductor, from conducere ‘bring together ’ (see conduct ).
conductor rail
con |duct ¦or rail ▶noun a rail transmitting current to an electric train or other vehicle.
conductress
con |duc ¦tress |kənˈdʌktrɪs | ▶noun a female conductor, especially in a bus or other passenger vehicle.
conduct sheet
con |duct sheet ▶noun a form used in schools and the armed forces to record someone's offences and punishments.
conductus
conductus |kənˈdʌktəs | ▶noun ( pl. conducti |-tʌɪ | ) a musical setting of a metrical Latin text, of the 12th or 13th century. ORIGIN from medieval Latin, from Latin conducere ‘bring together ’ (see conduct ).
American Oxford Thesaurus
conduct
conduct noun 1 they complained about her conduct: behavior, performance, demeanor; actions, activities, deeds, doings, exploits; habits, manners; formal comportment. 2 the conduct of the elections: management, running, direction, control, supervision, regulation, administration, organization, coordination, orchestration, handling. ▶verb 1 the election was conducted lawfully: manage, direct, run, administer, organize, coordinate, orchestrate, handle, control, oversee, supervise, regulate, carry out /on. 2 he was conducted through the corridors: escort, guide, lead, usher, show; shepherd, see, bring, take, help. 3 aluminum conducts heat: transmit, convey, carry, transfer, impart, channel, relay; disseminate, diffuse, radiate. PHRASES conduct oneself I am proud of the way they conducted themselves: behave, act, acquit oneself, bear oneself; formal comport oneself.
Oxford Thesaurus
conduct
conduct noun |(stress on the first syllable ) | 1 townspeople regularly complained about students' conduct: behaviour, way of behaving, performance, comportment, demeanour, bearing, deportment; actions, acts, activities, deeds, doings, handiwork, exploits, ways, habits, practices, manners. 2 the conduct of the elections: management, managing, running, direction, control, controlling, overseeing, supervision, regulation, leadership, masterminding, administration, organization, coordination, orchestration, handling, guidance, carrying out, carrying on; formal prosecution. ▶verb |(stress on the second syllable ) | 1 the election was conducted according to new electoral law: manage, direct, run, be in control of, control, oversee, supervise, be in charge of, preside over, regulate, mastermind, administer, organize, coordinate, orchestrate, handle, guide, govern, lead, carry out, carry on. 2 Lucien was conducted through a maze of corridors: escort, guide, lead, usher, pilot, accompany, show, show someone the way; shepherd, herd, drive, convoy; see, bring, take, help, assist. 3 aluminium, being a metal, readily conducts heat: transmit, convey, carry, transfer, pass on, hand on, communicate, impart, channel, bear, relay, dispatch, mediate; disseminate, spread, circulate, diffuse, radiate. PHRASES conduct oneself I am proud of the way they conducted themselves: behave, perform, act, acquit oneself, bear oneself, carry oneself; rare comport oneself, deport oneself.
Duden Dictionary
Conductus
Con duc tus , Kon duk tus Substantiv, maskulin Musik , der Konduktus |Cond u ctus Kond u ktus |der Conductus; Genitiv: des Conductus, Plural: die Conductus |[…tuːs ]|der Konduktus; Genitiv: des Konduktus, Plural: die Konduktus |[…tuːs ]|mittellateinisch conductus, zu lateinisch conducere, Kondukt a einstimmiges lateinisches Lied des Mittelalters b mehrstimmiger Gesang des Mittelalters, bei dem die Hauptmelodie in der Unterstimme liegt
French Dictionary
conducteur
conducteur , trice adj. et n. m. adjectif et nom masculin Se dit d ’un corps plus ou moins apte à transmettre la chaleur ou l ’électricité. : Le cuivre est un bon conducteur de l ’électricité.
conducteur
conducteur conductrice n. m. f. féminin et nom masculin Personne qui conduit un véhicule. : Un conducteur d ’autobus. Une conductrice de camion.
conductibilité
conductibilité n. f. nom féminin Qualité des corps conducteurs.
conductible
conductible adj. adjectif Qui est doué de conductibilité. : Le cuivre est une matière conductible.
conduction
conduction n. f. nom féminin Action de conduire l ’électricité ou la chaleur.
Spanish Dictionary
conducta
conducta nombre femenino 1 Manera de comportarse una persona en una situación determinada o en general :conducta antisocial; patrones de conducta social; tuvo una conducta ejemplar; aquella conducta huidiza me hizo sospechar que escondía algo .SINÓNIMO comportamiento .2 biol Manera de realizar un organismo sus funciones vitales o de responder a ciertos estímulos :tras el nacimiento el niño posee una serie de conductas reflejas como succionar, llorar, etc. ; un ejemplo de la conducta social de las aves es el relevo entre el macho y la hembra para cuidar el nido . VÉASE caución de conducta .
conductancia
conductancia nombre femenino 1 Propiedad de la membrana de las células que define su permeabilidad a los iones .2 nombre femenino En electricidad, valor inverso de la resistencia .
conductibilidad
conductibilidad nombre femenino fís Conductividad .
conductible
conductible adjetivo Que está dotado de conductividad .
conductismo
conductismo nombre masculino Corriente de la psicología que se basa en la observación del comportamiento o conducta del ser que se estudia y que explica el mismo como un conjunto de relaciones entre estímulos y respuestas .SINÓNIMO behaviorismo .ETIMOLOGÍA Calco del inglés behaviourism (V. behaviorismo ).
conductista
conductista adjetivo 1 Del conductismo o relacionado con esta corriente de la psicología :paradigma conductista; enfoque conductista .2 adjetivo /nombre común [persona ] Que es partidario o seguidor del conductismo :psicólogo conductista; los conductistas radicales de la primera época .
conductividad
conductividad nombre femenino fís Propiedad natural de los cuerpos que permiten el paso a través de sí del calor o la electricidad :el cobre es el metal de las industrias eléctricas por su conductividad .SINÓNIMO conductibilidad .
conductivo, -va
conductivo, -va adjetivo Que permite el paso del calor o la electricidad :el aluminio es un metal conductivo .SINÓNIMO conductor .
conducto
conducto nombre masculino 1 Tubo construido para conducir fluidos de un lugar a otro :los oleoductos son conductos .2 Órgano del cuerpo que tiene forma de tubo :las venas y arterias son conductos por los que circula la sangre; el conducto lacrimal .3 Camino o procedimiento que se sigue para hacer algo :envía la solicitud por conducto oficial antes de que acabe el plazo; para tramitar estos documentos hay que seguir los conductos reglamentarios .
conductor, -ra
conductor, -ra adjetivo /nombre masculino y femenino 1 [persona ] Que conduce un automóvil, en especial si se dedica a ello profesionalmente :el conductor del ómnibus es muy joven .SINÓNIMO chófer .2 adjetivo /nombre masculino [cuerpo ] Que deja pasar fácilmente a través de su masa el calor o la electricidad :los metales son buenos conductores .SINÓNIMO conductivo .3 nombre masculino y femenino RPlata, Méx Persona que presenta un programa de televisión o de radio . VÉASE hilo conductor .
conductual
conductual adjetivo De la conducta o relacionado con ella :evaluación conductual; funcionamiento conductual; el enfoque conductual de la obra determina las conclusiones .
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
conduct
con duct /kəndʌ́kt / (! 動詞 と 名詞 で発音 強勢が異なるので注意 ) 〖con (共に )duct (導く )〗(名 )conductor 動詞 ~s /-ts /; ~ed /-ɪd /; ~ing 他動詞 1 〈調査 実験 運動など 〉を行う , 進める, 管理 [運営 ]する (carry out ); 〈事業など 〉を経営する (!しばしば受け身で ) ▸ The interview was conducted yesterday .面接は昨日行われた ▸ conduct a campaign to increase efficiency 効率アップの取り組みを進める 2 〈楽団 演奏会 曲など 〉を指揮する ▸ conduct a symphony orchestra 交響楽団の指揮をする 3 a. ⦅かたく ⦆〖~ oneself +副詞 〗身を処する , ふるまう (behave ) (!副詞 は様態の表現 ) ▸ Conduct yourself like a lady .貴婦人らしくふるまいなさい b. 〈生活など 〉を送る .4 〘物理 〙〈物質が 〉〈熱 電気など 〉を伝導する (↔insulate ) (!進行形にしない ) ▸ conduct electricity well 電気をよく伝える 5 ⦅かたく ⦆〖~ A +副詞 〗A 〈人 〉を案内する, 導く , 連れて回る (guide ) (!副詞 は方向 場所の表現 ) ▸ conduct tourists around the city 観光客に市内を案内する ▸ a conducted tour of Naples ナポリ市のガイド付きツアー 自動詞 1 (楽団 合唱団などを )指揮する .2 案内する .名詞 /kɑ́ndʌkt |kɔ́n -/U ⦅かたく ⦆1 (道徳上の )行い , 行為 , 品行 , 行状 (→action )▸ disorderly conduct 治安を乱す行為 ▸ improper conduct 不適切 [わいせつ ]な行為 ▸ professional conduct 専門家らしいふるまい .2 (事業 活動などの )管理 , 処理 , 運営 (方法 ), やり方 ▸ The judge criticized the lawyer's conduct of the case .判事は弁護人の訴訟の進行を批判した .3 案内 , 誘導 .~́ sh è et 素行表 .
conduction
con duc tion /kəndʌ́kʃ (ə )n /名詞 U 1 (水を管などで )引くこと .2 〘物理 〙(熱 電気などの )伝導 .
conductive
con duc tive /kəndʌ́ktɪv /形容詞 〘物理 〙(熱 電気などの )伝導力がある ; 伝導 (性 )の .~̀ educ á tion 伝導教育 〘運動障害を持つ子供や大人に対する治療方法 〙.
conductivity
con duc tiv i ty /kɑ̀ndʌktɪ́vəti |kɔ̀n -/名詞 U 〘物理 〙(熱 電気 )伝導性 [度, 率 ].
conductor
con duc tor /kəndʌ́ktə r /→conduct 名詞 複 ~s /-z /C 1 〘楽 〙指揮者 .2 (バス 列車などの )車掌 (!⦅英 ⦆では列車の車掌はguard ) .3 〘物理 〙伝導体 , 導体 ; 導線 ; 避雷針 (lightning conductor ).4 案内者 ; (ツアーの )添乗員 .5 指導者 ; 管理者 .~́ r à il (鉄道の )送電 [導体 ]レール .~ship 名詞 U 指導者 [案内者 ]の職務 .
conductress
con duc tress /kəndʌ́ktrəs /名詞 C ⦅英 やや古 ⦆(バス 電車などの )女車掌 (⦅男女共用 ⦆conductor ).