distribution channel channel | a way of selling a company's product either directly or via distributors, possible distribution channels are wholesalers or small retailers or retail chains or direct mailers or your own stores |
channel catfish channel cat Ictalurus punctatus | freshwater food fish common throughout central United States |
blue catfish blue cat blue channel catfish blue channel cat | a large catfish of the Mississippi valley |
red drum channel bass redfish Sciaenops ocellatus | large edible fish found off coast of United States from Massachusetts to Mexico |
channel | a passage for water (or other fluids) to flow through, the fields were crossed with irrigation channels, gutters carried off the rainwater into a series of channels under the street |
channel television channel TV channel | a television station and its programs, a satellite TV channel, surfing through the channels, they offer more than one hundred channels |
chunnel Channel Tunnel | the railroad tunnel between France and England under the English Channel |
selectivity | the property of being selective |
duct epithelial duct canal channel | a bodily passage or tube lined with epithelial cells and conveying a secretion or other substance, the tear duct was obstructed, the alimentary canal, poison is released through a channel in the snake's fangs |
channel transmission channel | a path over which electrical signals can pass, a channel is typically what you rent from a telephone company |
channel communication channel line | (often plural) a means of communication or access, it must go through official channels, lines of communication were set up between the two firms |
back channel | an alternative to the regular channels of communication that is used when agreements must be made secretly (especially in diplomacy or government), they negotiated via a back channel |
Channel Islands National Park | a national park in California featuring sea birds and marine life |
Channel Island | any of a group of British islands in the English Channel off the northern coast of France |
Bristol Channel | an inlet of the Atlantic Ocean between southern Wales and southwestern England |
channel | a deep and relatively narrow body of water (as in a river or a harbor or a strait linking two larger bodies) that allows the best passage for vessels, the ship went aground in the channel |
English Channel | an arm of the Atlantic Ocean that forms a channel between France and Britain |
Mozambique Channel | an arm of the Indian Ocean between Madagascar and southeastern Africa |
North Channel | a strait between Northern Ireland and Scotland that connects the Atlantic Ocean and the Irish Sea |
groove channel | a long narrow furrow cut either by a natural process (such as erosion) or by a tool (as e.g. a groove in a phonograph record) |
channel capacity | the maximum data rate that can be attained over a given channel |
surf channel-surf | switch channels, on television |
transmit transfer transport channel channelize channelise | send from one person or place to another, transmit a message |
channel canalize canalise | direct the flow of, channel information towards a broad audience |
impart conduct transmit convey carry channel | transmit or serve as the medium for transmission, Sound carries well over water, The airwaves carry the sound, Many metals conduct heat |
stereophonic stereo two-channel | designating sound transmission from two sources through two channels |
mono monophonic single-channel | designating sound transmission or recording or reproduction over a single channel |
adjacent | near or close to but not necessarily touching, lands adjacent to the mountains, New York and adjacent cities |
adjacent next side by side(p) | nearest in space or position, immediately adjoining without intervening space, had adjacent rooms, in the next room, the person sitting next to me, our rooms were side by side |
adjacent conterminous contiguous neighboring(a) | having a common boundary or edge, abutting, touching, Rhode Island has two bordering states, Massachusetts and Conncecticut, the side of Germany conterminous with France, Utah and the contiguous state of Idaho, neighboring cities |
back-channel | via a back channel, the failure of back-channel negotiations |
next door in the adjacent house in the adjacent apartment | at or in or to the adjacent residence, the criminal had been living next door all this time |