A body piercing, even when healed, can be a conduit for infectious bacteria.
A service of electric tramways is maintained, notable as being the first system installed in England with a combination of the trolley and conduit principles of supplying current.
A wick is essential for any candle, as it acts as the conduit between the flame and the candle wax.
Amazon sells products to customers, but it also acts as a conduit for other merchants to sell to customers on its site.
Another example was steel conduit fittings with a half inch gas thread.
Beneath each cap, and near the upper end of the shaft, are a number of vertical slits through which the drainage water which rises passes out into the conduit or trench from which the irrigating streams originate.
By 1994, the KDP had established a modus vivendi with the Ba'athist regime - it had become the chief conduit for oil smuggling.
Channeling involves the psychic allowing a spirit or entity to use their body as a conduit to communicate.
Could RSS feeds become a conduit for the transmission of computer worms?
For tricuspid atresia and pulmonary atresia, the Fontan procedure connects the right atrium to the pulmonary artery directly or with a conduit, and the atrial defect is closed.
Fortunately good water is tolerably plentiful; for, though the wells are mostly undrinkable, and even the famous Zamzam water only available for medicinal or religious purposes, the underground conduit from beyond Arafa, completed by Sultan Selim II.
From a collection of the best experiments by previous workers he selected eighty-two (fifty-one on the velocity of water in conduit pipes, and thirty-one on its velocity in open canals); and, discussing these on physical and mechanical principles, he succeeded in drawing up general formulae, which afforded a simple expression for the velocity of running water.
Furthermore, the Safer Schools Partnerships have the potential to deliver a two-way conduit between the police and young people.
He was born at 9 Conduit Street, Westminster, on the 24th of January 1749.
Here two reservoirs of a combined capacity of 668 million gallons have been constructed, and a conduit some 36 m.
In laying off receiving drains it is essential to give hedgerows and trees a good offing, lest the conduit be obstructed by the roots.
In one of these earlier strata, of very great antiquity, there was discovered, in connexion with the shrine, a conduit built of bricks, in the form of an arch.
It may be pointed out here that these expressions are defined by the act, the effect of the definitions being shortly that a drain is a conduit for the drainage of one building or of several within the same curtilage, while a sewer comprises every kind of drain except that which is covered by the definition of a drain as above stated.
Its name is derived from the "Teat" or conduit which conveyed water from Horningsham, about r m.
Kunadlini flows through the sushumna, a hollow conduit within the spine.
One said that strong locality managers acting as a two-way communication conduit could play a key role in developing cohesion at locality level.
Rough sketch of the medieval market, plus the later fountain or conduit head fed by Hobson's conduit head fed by Hobson's Conduit.
That contestant acts as a conduit, trying to get the spirit to enter their body.
The abbey conduit, of the middle of the 14th century, is conspicuous in the main street of the town.
The canal is a key conduit for international maritime travel and each year dozens of cruise lines travel to the isthmus on their journeys to the Caribbean, Mexico and Central America.
The chaos driver was a conduit, a passageway through which chaos driver was a conduit, a passageway through which chaos could flow.
The chief building (in Chapel Street, Lamb's Conduit Street, London) is adorned with busts of the saints of humanity, and regular services are held.
The Conduit is probably a game you haven't come across yet.
The Conduit is scheduled to release in June 2009.
The design of any piece of catchwork will vary with local conditions, but generally it may be stated that it consists in putting each conduit save the first to the double use of a feeder or distributor and of a drain or collector.
The famous Sears catalog was the conduit by which most people with smaller incomes and less access to shops they could afford were able to buy clothes, shoes, accessories and even appliances.
The Great Bath, which is still fed today by a Roman lead conduit, was originally decorated with intricate Roman mosaic pavements.
The masks are the conduit for air that comes from a continuous positive airway pressure machine.
The most common being the ileal conduit which was described by Bricker (1950 ).
The PEM is the conduit between your gear shifts or accelerations and the motor.
The reservoir is supplied by a conduit of 6th-century tiles connected with an early stone aqueduct, the course of which is traceable beneath the Dionysiac theatre and the royal garden in the direction of the Upper Ilissus.
The stick is inserted into a launch tube which is normally a piece of plastic piping or conduit.
The water is brought to the town in a conduit consisting of 233 m.
The water supply is carried by an overground conduit from a spring near Diabat.
Then she asked if we were concerned Owen's death might be a conduit to revealing the tipster.
There were several miles of conduit with the wartime bombing damaging much.
These are supplied through a conduit 5 m.
These new vessels feeding the tumor also provide a conduit for tumor spread throughout the body.
Use it to open the small lockers in the first conduit pit to find a databank item.
We were concerned that his death might be a conduit to revealing the problem.
Young people had been swinging on the electrical conduit to the Church.