Verb The police are conducting an investigation into last week's robbery. I like the way the company conducts business. The magazine conducted a survey. Who will be conducting the meeting? The committee is expected to conduct hearings in May. He conducts the choir with great skill and emotion. conducting the music of Mozart Our guide slowly conducted us through the museum. Our guide conducted us along the path. Noun A panel investigated her conduct and she was subsequently fired. the President was happy to leave the conduct of foreign affairs to his secretary of state See More
Recent Examples on the Web
Verb
People are required to wear masks at almost all times, health codes are checked when dining in and school students must conduct rapid antigen tests daily. Felix Tam, Fortune, 18 Sep. 2022 That creates stiff competition for front-line tax-enforcement workers, the revenue agents who conduct audits and the revenue officers who collect unpaid taxes. Richard Rubin, WSJ, 17 Sep. 2022 In Naomi Alderman's contemporary work, the recognizable world is all but the same, except for the shocking revelation that teenage girls can now conduct electricity to cause intense physical pain or death to others. Robert English, EW.com, 17 Sep. 2022 The state Commission on Ethics this week sent the case to the Florida Division of Administrative Hearings, where a judge will conduct a hearing.Orlando Sentinel, 15 Sep. 2022 The motion also argues that the jury, not the judge, should conduct the fact finding to determine if aggravating circumstances in the murder outweigh mitigating factors. Paul Gattis | Pgattis@al.com, al, 15 Sep. 2022 This is because subcutaneous fat cannot conduct heat well, making thermoregulation more difficult. Stella Marie Hombach, Scientific American, 15 Sep. 2022 Expected later this month or in October, the RFQ will identify an architecture firm that using the facility study will conduct its own assessment related to 2022 standards. John Benson, cleveland, 14 Sep. 2022 The federal government recommends that roughly three dozen screening tests be performed, but some states conduct many more. Michelle Andrews, CBS News, 13 Sep. 2022
Noun
Sarver was suspended this week, plus fined $10 million, after an investigation showed a pattern of lewd, misogynistic, and racist speech and conduct during his 18 years as owner of the Suns. Tim Reynolds, BostonGlobe.com, 16 Sep. 2022 Sarver was suspended this week, plus fined $10 million, after an investigation showed a pattern of lewd, misogynistic, and racist speech and conduct during his 18 years as owner of the Suns.CBS News, 16 Sep. 2022 Sarver was suspended this week, plus fined $10 million, after an investigation showed a pattern of lewd, misogynistic, and racist speech and conduct during his 18 years as owner of the Suns. Tim Reynolds, ajc, 16 Sep. 2022 Sarver, 60, must also complete a training program focused on respect and appropriate workplace conduct. Jeff Zillgitt, USA TODAY, 14 Sep. 2022 Sarver must complete a training program during his suspension focused on respect and appropriate conduct in the workplace. Duane Rankin, The Arizona Republic, 14 Sep. 2022 The tentative revision to the meeting conduct and public comment policy passed a first reading Tuesday night. Alison Cross, Hartford Courant, 7 Sep. 2022 While his supporters will remember him for securing a huge election victory, Brexit and support for Ukraine, his detractors say Johnson's conduct and flexible relationship with the truth damaged the Conservative Party brand. Guy Davies, ABC News, 5 Sep. 2022 Rendon and Atkins did promise new mandatory training for lawmakers and staff about the investigation process and appropriate workplace conduct. Sophia Bollag, San Francisco Chronicle, 19 Aug. 2022 See More
Word History
Etymology
Verb
Middle English conducten "to guide, direct," borrowed from Latin conductus, past participle of condūcere "to bring together, join, hire, be of advantage, be conducive (to)" (Medieval Latin also "to lead, escort, provide a channel for [water]") — more at conduce
Note: Middle English also used in the same senses conduiten, with variants conduten, conditen, based on Anglo-French conduit, past participle of cunduire, conduire, going back to Latin condūcere; these forms were carried into Tudor English, but they largely expired by the seventeenth century. Compare conduit. See also note at conduce.
Noun
Middle English conduct, conducte "act of escorting," borrowed from Medieval Latin conductus "leadership, escort, retinue, hire, water channel," going back to Late Latin, "contract," from Latin condūcere "to bring together, join, hire, accept a contract for" (Medieval Latin also "to lead, escort, provide a channel for [water]") + -tus, suffix of action nouns — more at conduce
Note: The noun conduct has been influenced in sense by its verbal counterpart conduct. Already in the sixteenth century the noun was used to mean "leadership, management" and "capability in leadership or management, aptitude for command." The more general sense "behavior in a particular situation" appears in the seventeenth century. The sense development is largely paralleled by the history of French conduite, a nominal derivative from the feminine past participle of conduire "to guide, escort"; see also conduit and the note at conduce.