释义 |
chan·nel I. \ˈchanəl\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English chanel, from Old French, from Latin canalis pipe, channel — more at canal 1. a. : the hollow bed where a natural body or stream of water runs or may run b. : the deeper part of a moving body of water (as a river, harbor, or strait) where the main current flows or which affords the best passage c. : a strait or narrow sea between two close land masses < the English Channel > < the Mozambique Channel > d. : a means or instrumentality aiding communication or expression or commercial exchange < alongside the familiar press, radio, and film media … other channels have multiplied — E.D.Canham > e. channels plural : a fixed, accustomed, or official course of communication or transmission of information or of commercial interchange < submitting material to the Defense Department without going through prescribed … Army channels — New York Times > f. : a person through whom information is transmitted < he … appears to have been one of Beckford's channels for communication with Courtenay — Times Literary Supplement > g. : a way, course, or direction of thought or action < the accident which directed my curiosity originally into this channel — Charles Lamb > specifically : a restricted path of movement (as of traffic directed between islands at an intersection) h. : river 4 i. : a band of frequencies of sufficient width for a single radio or television communication being as little as a few cycles per second wide for telegraphy or as great as several megacycles wide for television j. : the mechanism providing a single path in multiple-path systems for simultaneously and separately recording or transmitting sounds from more than one source; also : the complete system from microphone to recorder in single-path systems 2. a. : an especially tubular enclosed passage : conduit, pipe, duct < the poison channel in a snake's fangs > b. : any of the chambers holding identical matrices in a circulating-matrix typesetting machine 3. : a long gutter, groove, or furrow: as a. : a street or road gutter b. : canal 4 c. : a flute in a column d. : a groove cut along the line where rock is to be split e. : a slanting groove cut around the edge of an outsole of a shoe on the grain surface for imbedding stitches; also : one of two parallel grooves cut around the edge of an insole on the flesh surface forming a ridge to which the welt is sewed f. : the track for the rope in a tackle block g. : a metal beam or strip having a U-shaped section Synonyms: see mean II. verb (channeled or channelled ; channeled or channelled ; channeling or channelling ; channels) transitive verb 1. a. : to form, cut, or wear a channel in < spring freshets may channel the fields > < the river channeled a new course > b. : to incise with a series of parallel flutes : groove < channel a chair leg > c. : to lower (an automobile body) by rebuilding with channels which fit around the frame rails — compare chop I vt 4 2. : to traverse by or as if by channels < moors channeled by pastoral valleys > 3. a. : to send or convey through or as if through a channel < channel materials and labor into housing > specifically : to direct through or into a fixed or official course b. : to direct (feelings or human drives) into particular channels of behavior or action < channel the aggressive impulses of adolescents into sports activity > 4. : to confine in or as if in a channel < troops channeled in a narrow road with blocks at either end > 5. : to shape or stamp (as a metal strip) into a form having a U-shaped section intransitive verb 1. : to move in or as if in a channel < the molten metal channels into a belt of troughs > 2. : to have a channel cut in < gear lubricants may congeal and channel in cold weather > III. noun (-s) Etymology: alteration of chainwale : one of the flat ledges of heavy plank or metal to which the chain plates are fastened and which are bolted edgewise to the outside of a ship, serving to increase the spread of the shrouds and carry them clear of the bulwarks IV. adjective Etymology: channel (I) : channeled < channel molding > V. noun 1. : a path along which information passes or an area (as of magnetic tape) on which it is stored 2. : a transition passage in jazz : bridge 3. : gutter 2f 4. : one who conveys thoughts or energy from a source believed to be outside one's body or conscious mind ; specifically : one who speaks for a nonphysical being (as while in a trance) — compare medium 7 in the Dict 5. : a passage created in a selectively permeable membrane by a conformational change in membrane proteins < an inflow of sodium ions through the cell's sodium channels > — see calcium channel blocker herein VI. transitive verb : to serve as a channel or intermediary for < gets $15 … for channeling the archangel Gabriel — Otto Friedrich > • channeler noun |