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ConductingConduct Con*duct" (k[o^]n*d[u^]kt"), v. t. [imp. & p. p.
Conducted; p. pr. & vb. n. Conducting.] [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) To serve as a medium for conveying; to transmit,
as heat, light, electricity, etc.
5. (Mus.) To direct, as the leader in the performance of a
musical composition. Conduction
Conduction Con*duc"tion (k[o^]n*d[u^]k"sh[u^]n), n. [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) 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.
ConductivityConductivity Con`duc*tiv"i*ty
(k[o^]n`d[u^]k*t[i^]v"[i^]*t[y^]), n.
The quality or power of conducting, or of receiving and
transmitting, as heat, electricity, etc.; as, the
conductivity of a nerve.
Thermal conductivity (Physics), the quantity of heat that
passes in unit time through unit area of a plate whose
thickness is unity, when its opposite faces differ in
temperature by one degree. external conductivityEmissivity Em`is*siv"i*ty, n.
Tendency to emission; comparative facility of emission, or
rate at which emission takes place; specif. (Physics), the
rate of emission of heat from a bounding surface per degree
of temperature difference between the surface and surrounding
substances (called by Fourier external conductivity). Nonconducting
Nonconducting Non`con*duct"ing, a.
Not conducting; not transmitting a fluid or force; thus, in
electricity, wax is a nonconducting substance.
Nonconduction
Nonconduction Non`con*duc"tion, n.
The quality of not being able to conduct or transmit; failure
to conduct.
Thermal conductivityThermal Ther"mal, a. [L. thermae hot springs, fr. Gr. ?, pl.
of ? heat, fr. ? hot, warm, ? to warm, make hot; perhaps akin
to L. formus warm, and E. forceps.]
Of or pertaining to heat; warm; hot; as, the thermal unit;
thermal waters.
The thermal condition of the earth. --J. D.
Forbes.
Thermal conductivity, Thermal spectrum. See under
Conductivity, and Spectrum.
Thermal unit (Physics), a unit chosen for the comparison or
calculation of quantities of heat. The unit most commonly
employed is the amount of heat necessary to raise the
temperature of one gram or one pound of water from zero to
one degree Centigrade. See Calorie, and under Unit. Thermal conductivityConductivity Con`duc*tiv"i*ty
(k[o^]n`d[u^]k*t[i^]v"[i^]*t[y^]), n.
The quality or power of conducting, or of receiving and
transmitting, as heat, electricity, etc.; as, the
conductivity of a nerve.
Thermal conductivity (Physics), the quantity of heat that
passes in unit time through unit area of a plate whose
thickness is unity, when its opposite faces differ in
temperature by one degree. Thermometic conductivity--J. D. Everett.
Thermometic conductivity (Physics), the thermal
conductivity when the unit of heat employed is the heat
required to raise a unit volume of the substance one
degree.
Meaning of Conducti from wikipedia
- The
conductus (plural:
conducti) was a
sacred Latin song in the
Middle Ages, one
whose poetry and
music were
newly composed. It is non-liturgical since...
-
melisma on one of the last
syllables of the text,
repeated in each strophe.
Conducti were
traditionally divided into two groups,
conductus ****
cauda and conductus...
- and four-part
compositions in four
distinct forms: organa, clausulae,
conducti and motets, and
three distinct styles. In the
organum style the
upper voices...
-
interchange of
parts or
voices according to a scheme,
often used in
English conducti and
frequently in
English motets of the late
thirteenth and
early fourteenth...
- verse. The
significance of the
cauda in
conductus music is such that most
conducti were
divided into the
categories conductus ****
cauda and
conductus sine...
-
Xenophon of
Ephesus 1.13–14; Dio
Chrysostom 15.25; Lucian, De
mercede conductis 24. St.
Augustine Letter 10. Fuhrmann,
Policing the
Roman Empire, p. 25...
-
based on the
Judgement of Paris. Περὶ τῶν ἐν Μισθῷ συνόντων De
Mercede conductis On
Salaried Posts in
Great Houses (The
Dependent Scholar) "A Hogarthian...
-
similar to a short,
cadential organum purum section but in
organa tripla or
conducti it is seen that
irregular notation is used.
Either the last
notes of ligatures...
- had an
actio locati for the hire,
while the hirer's
remedy was the
actio conducti. The
locatio conductio might be:
Locatio conductio rei: when one person...
- Physicians:
Bustorum aliquot Reliquiæ ab anno 1628, qui mihi
primus fuit
conducti seorsim a
parentibus non inau****ato hospitii. It
begins with an account...