conductive — index causal Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
conductive — 1520s, from CONDUCT (Cf. conduct) + IVE (Cf. ive). Physics sense is from 1840. Related: Conductivity (1837) … Etymology dictionary
conductive — [kən duk′tiv] adj. 1. having conductivity 2. having to do with conduction … English World dictionary
conductive — ● conductif, conductive adjectif Capable de conduire le courant électrique. ● conductif, conductive (expressions) adjectif Couplage conductif, connexion établie entre deux circuits au moyen d un conducteur … Encyclopédie Universelle
conductive — [[t]kəndʌ̱ktɪv[/t]] ADJ GRADED A conductive substance is able to conduct things such as heat and electricity. [TECHNICAL] Salt water is much more conductive than fresh water is. Derived words: conductivity [[t]kɒ̱ndʌktɪ̱vɪti[/t]] N UNCOUNT ...a… … English dictionary
conductive — adjective a) Able to conduct electrical current or heat Distilled water is not electrically conductive. b) of, or relating to conductivity of a material Syn: conductant Ant … Wiktionary
conductive — con·duc·tive dək tiv adj 1) having conductivity: relating to conduction (as of electricity) 2) caused by failure in the mechanisms for sound transmission in the external or middle ear <conductive hearing loss> … Medical dictionary
conductive — con|duc|tive [kənˈdʌktıv] adj able to conduct electricity, heat etc ▪ Copper is a very conductive metal. >conductivity [ˌkɔndʌkˈtıvıti US ˌka:n ] n [U] … Dictionary of contemporary English
conductive — adjective technical able to conduct electricity, heat etc: Copper is a very conductive metal. conductivity noun (U) … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
conductive — UK [kənˈdʌktɪv] / US adjective physics a conductive substance allows heat or electricity to pass through it Derived word: conductivity UK / US noun uncountable … English dictionary