different between conveyor vs duct

conveyor

English

Alternative forms

  • conveyour (obsolete)
  • conveyer (rare)

Etymology

convey +? -or.

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /k?n?ve??/
  • (US) enPR: k?nv???r, IPA(key): /k?n?ve??/

Noun

conveyor (plural conveyors)

  1. A person that conveys, transports or delivers.
  2. Anything that conveys, transports or delivers.
    Words are a conveyor of meaning.
  3. A mechanical arrangement for transporting material or objects, generally over short or moderate distances, as from one part of a building to another.

Derived terms

  • conveyor belt

Translations

conveyor From the web:

  • what conveyor belt
  • what conveyor belt means
  • what's conveyor mean
  • what conveyor belt is used for
  • what conveyor systems do
  • what's conveyor oven
  • what conveyor chain
  • what's conveyor sushi


duct

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin ductus (leading, conducting, noun), from d?c? (to lead, conduct, draw) +? -tus (action noun suffix). Doublet of ductus and douit. Also via Medieval Latin ductus (a conveyance of water; a channel), which itself has the first mentioned etymology.

Pronunciation

  • enPR: d?kt
  • IPA(key): /d?kt/
  • Rhymes: -?kt
  • Homophone: ducked

Noun

duct (plural ducts)

  1. a pipe, tube or canal which carries gas or liquid from one place to another
    Hyponym: air duct
    1. an enclosure or channel for electrical cable runs, telephone cables, or other conductors
      Hyponym: bus duct
    2. (anatomy) a vessel for conveying lymph or glandular secretions such as tears or bile
      Hyponyms: bile duct, cochlear duct, collecting duct, cystic duct, duct of Wirsung, efferent duct, ejaculatory duct, epithelial duct, lacrimal duct, milk duct, Müllerian duct, nasolacrimal duct, pancreatic duct, paramesonephric duct, tear duct, thoracic duct, thyroglossal duct, utriculosaccular duct, Wolffian duct
    3. (botany) a tube or elongated cavity (such as a xylem vessel) for conveying water, sap, or air
  2. (physics) a layer (as in the atmosphere or the ocean) which occurs under usually abnormal conditions and in which radio or sound waves are confined to a restricted path
  3. (obsolete) guidance, direction
    • 1650, Henry Hammond, Of the reasonableness of Christian religion
      [] otherwise to express His care and love to mankind, viz., in giving and consigning to them His written word for a rule and constant director of life, not leaving them to the duct of their own inclinations.

Derived terms

Translations

Verb

duct (third-person singular simple present ducts, present participle ducting, simple past and past participle ducted)

  1. to enclose in a duct
  2. to channel something (such as a gas) or propagate something (such as radio waves) through a duct or series of ducts

Derived terms

Related terms

References

  • “duct”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–present.
  • “duct”, in Merriam–Webster Online Dictionary, (Please provide a date or year).

Romanian

Etymology

From Latin ductus

Noun

duct n (uncountable)

  1. duct

Declension

duct From the web:

  • what duct carries bile to and from the gallbladder
  • what ductile means
  • what ductility
  • what duct empties into the duodenum
  • what duct drains bile from the gallbladder
  • what duct drains the gallbladder
  • what duct is indicated in the figure
  • what duct is cut in a cholecystectomy
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