How to Use conduit in a Sentence
conduit
noun-
Breed had pitched the center as a conduit to longer-term care.
—Heather Knight, San Francisco Chronicle, 9 Dec. 2022
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The sense of pianist as conduit was even stronger on the first half.
—Zachary Lewis, cleveland, 4 Nov. 2019
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They are thought to form at the top of the conduit as magma gushes up it.
—Robin George Andrews, Wired, 6 June 2021
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That dead body is the conduit that allows all those emotions to come in.
—Cnt Editors, Condé Nast Traveler, 12 Jan. 2023
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Judy Rodgers viewed herself as a conduit.
—Jeremy Repanich, Robb Report, 19 Nov. 2025
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The vagus nerve is, in one way of thinking, the conduit of the mind.
—R. Douglas Fields, Smithsonian Magazine, 13 Sep. 2024
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One-half-inch conduit is great for the small fiber optic cable.
—Tim Carter, Hartford Courant, 10 May 2025
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Regardless, the cave serves as a conduit for her tribe to learn about their past.
—Megan Gannon, National Geographic, 23 Nov. 2020
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The first also functions as a conduit.
—Annabelle Dufraigne, Architectural Digest, 10 Mar. 2026
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His goal in the classroom is to be a conduit to convey his passion for the past.
—Philly.com, 27 Mar. 2018
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The ear is the principal part of my body that serves as the conduit to writing.
—Literary Hub, 14 Apr. 2026
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Tom is like a conduit of Alice a lot of the time in her sense of humor.
—ELLE, 28 Mar. 2022
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The carpal tunnel is a narrow conduit in the wrist made up of small bones and soft tissues.
—Benjamin Plackett, Discover Magazine, 27 Jan. 2024
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One of the main reasons is that the underground wiring is faulty and not buried in conduit.
—Alixel Cabrera, The Salt Lake Tribune, 30 Dec. 2021
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Broadband conduit will also be installed as part of the project.
—Gregory Svirnovskiy, The Arizona Republic, 11 Aug. 2022
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The distance or lapse between, then, is a kind of conduit to the next chronotope.
—Ross Kenneth Urken, Scientific American, 14 June 2021
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The music served as a conduit to that, through that evolution.
—Vulture, 21 Feb. 2022
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More than mere armored knights, Paladins are forged as holy conduits.
—Jennifer Maas, Variety, 12 Dec. 2025
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There’s nothing wrong with your son being the main conduit between you, that’s for sure.
—Robin Abrahams, BostonGlobe.com, 10 May 2018
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My job as a storyteller is to be a conduit for those histories.
—Eric Ryan, Forbes.com, 20 Jan. 2026
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Gift cards are a common conduit used by catfishers.
—Abigail Van Buren, Boston Herald, 18 May 2026
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This is the first time the university has asked the city to be a conduit for a bond issue.
—Amy Lavalley, Chicago Tribune, 13 May 2025
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Poetry is a conduit that that opens our minds and hearts to the ancient wisdom of the wild.
—Deborah Calmeyer, Travel + Leisure, 16 Dec. 2023
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Their logic is in believing that these wallets will be the conduit to the new wave of apps.
—William Mougayar, Fortune Crypto, 28 May 2023
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This group is a conduit to their community.
—Tori Mason, CBS News, 14 Mar. 2026
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The food is a conduit of truth, and our space is an arena for exchanging stories and ideas.
—Omar Tate, Better Homes & Gardens, 7 June 2024
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The left, if possessed of the same faith, can become a conduit for that energy.
—Osita Nwanevu, The New Republic, 9 Nov. 2020
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Asha, the hero of the kingdom Rosas, is a conduit for empathy.
—Ken Makin, The Christian Science Monitor, 22 Nov. 2023
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The porous border has long been a conduit for the smuggling of people, weapons, and drugs.
—Kareem Chehayeb and Abby Sewell, The Christian Science Monitor, 8 Feb. 2025
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East-to-west traffic in the conduit was limited to just two vessels.
—Glenn Taylor, Footwear News, 27 Apr. 2026
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'conduit.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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