0 a pipe or passage for water or electrical wires to go through: --
The social media platform has served as a conduit for misinformation.
The warehouse will be a regional conduit for goods shipped to the port, then transported to stores.
Cracks in the rocks can act as conduits, transporting polluted water upward.
They make pipes and tubes that are used in construction and as electrical conduits.
1 a way of connecting two places, systems, etc.: --
2 a way of connecting two people or organizations: --
conduit for sth The new retail bank created by the merger might provide the insurance company with a conduit for selling its products to bank customers.
conduit between sb/sth and sb/sth The proposal that a board's senior non-executive should become a prime conduit between a company and its shareholders is causing concern.
3 something that carries or moves information: --
The internet has become a major conduit for video and sound (especially music) distribution.
Language is a key factor in the conduits through which punk travels.
Capstones also made of volcanic tuff covered the conduit for the length of its course, although differences in how the capstones were worked are apparent.
There are numerous potential advantages of using an extracardiac conduit, from both surgical and physiologic standpoints.
This conduit closes during atrial systole, but reopens through the rest of the cardiac cycle.
These projects have provided a conduit for the exchange of opinion between central government and older people.
Toward the inlet of the conduit, the capstones consisted of extremely heavy, river-worn, shaped slabs of tuff.
This is one of several indications that the system may have represented a technical advance on the city's conduit of two decades earlier.
If a balance between both sides is not kept, we are left with a broken conduit.