Meaning Channel
What does Channel mean? Here you find 138 meanings of the word Channel. You can also add a definition of Channel yourself

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Channel


See: Ion channel.
Source: medicinenet.com (offline)

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A linear, commonly concave-based depression through which water and sediment flow and into which sediment can be deposited in distinctive, often elongated bodies. Channels can occur in a variety of mo [..]
Source: glossary.oilfield.slb.com

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– A marketing term for the distribution chain for selling and delivering a product or service to the customers.
Source: intel.com

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n. ~ 1. Broadcasting · A circuit or portion of a frequency spectrum set aside for carrying information. - 2. A portion of a signal that carries information in parallel with other portions, which are a [..]
Source: www2.archivists.org

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In hydrologic terms, also known as Watercourse; an open conduit either naturally or artificially created which periodically, or continuously contains moving water, or forms a connecting link between t [..]
Source: w1.weather.gov

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The navigable portion of a waterway.
Source: discoverboating.com

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Definition Radio or television broadcast service provided by a media organization, organized in a schedule of programming content and identified by a unique trademark. Programme content is transmitted [..]
Source: glossary.uis.unesco.org

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A channel refers to the medium by which an article is available. Salesforce Knowledge offers four channels where you can make articles available.Internal App: Salesforce users can access articles in the Articles tab depending on their role visibility.Customer: Customers can access articles if the Articles tab is available in a community or Customer [..]
Source: help.salesforce.com (offline)

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1590s, "to wear channels in," from channel (n.). Meaning "convey in a channel" is from 1640s. Related: Channeled; channeling.
Source: etymonline.com

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early 14c., "bed of running water," from Old French chanel "bed of a waterway; tube, pipe, gutter," from Latin canalis "groove, channel, waterpipe" (see canal). Given a b [..]
Source: etymonline.com

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1. A method whereby a business dispenses its product, such as a retail or distribution channel, call center, or a web-based electronic storefront. 2. A push technology that allows users to subscribe t [..]
Source: inboundlogistics.com

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A channel is defined by a combination of three factors: A target device, for example, a mobile phone, personal digital assistant (PDA) or a PC; an interaction paradigm, for example, a graphical user i [..]
Source: gartner.com

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Like it sounds, a channel in which prices are moving. Parallel trendlines are drawn along the lows and highs of a price chart, forming a channel in which prices move. The trendlines form areas [..]
Source: platts.com

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Channel The bed of the sea or of a river ( Psalms 18:15 ; Isaiah 8:7 ). The "chanelbone" ( Job 31:22 marg.), properly "tube" or "shaft," an old term for the collar-bone.
Source: biblestudytools.com

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deepest part of a shallow body of water, often a passageway for ships.
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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waterway between two relatively close land masses. Read more in the NG Education Encyclopedia
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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Specific wavelengths of onboard satellite sensors.
Source: glossary.ametsoc.org

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A single stream of recorded sound with a location in a sound field ("left front loudspeaker"). This definition reflects common (although not universal) usage. Some writers use the te [..]
Source: digitizationguidelines.gov

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1. A communication path. Multiple channels can be multiplexed over a single cable in certain environments. 2. In IBM, the specific path between large computers (such as mainframes) and attached peripheral devices.
Source: wildpackets.com (offline)

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The area where siding and soffit panels are attached to the trim or corner post. Also refers to the trim itself, which is named for the letters of the alphabet they resemble (J-channel, F-channel, etc).
Source: krollwindow.com (offline)

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a path over which electrical signals can pass; "a channel is typically what you rent from a telephone company" impart: transmit or serve as the medium for transmission; & [..]
Source: google-dictionary.so8848.com

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Any medium by which information can be transmitted. For example, the air is a channel for our voices just as much as a fiber optic line can be data for a video signal.
Source: math.utah.edu

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a deep narrow strip of sea-water between tow pieces of land. The same word also means a kind of path through the air used for television programs
Source: eenglish.in

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1. A connection between initiating and terminating nodes of a circuit. 2. A single path provided by a transmission medium via either (a) physical separation, such as by multipair cable or (b) electrical separation, such as by frequency- or time-division multiplexing. 3. A path for conveying electrical or electromagnetic signals, usually distinguish [..]
Source: atis.org (offline)

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[IRC] n. The basic unit of discussion on IRC. Once one joins a channel, everything one types is read by others on that channel. Channels can either be named with numbers or with strings that begin wit [..]
Source: hacker-dictionary.com

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When prices trend between two parallel trendlines, this is referred to as a channel. See ChartSchool article on Price Channel (Continuation).
Source: stockcharts.com

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Jensens Internet Dictionary Transmission line that can carry the sound of a separate MIDI instrument. Each MIDI port allows up to 16 separate channels for sending or receiving data. Each channel can function as a separate instrument in an ensemble, each using its own patch and responding independently to continuous controllers. (See also MIDI).  C [..]
Source: comptechdoc.org (offline)

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A channel refers to a certain component of an image. For instance, the components of an RGB image are the three primary colors red, green, blue, and sometimes transparency (alpha). Every channel is a [..]
Source: docs.gimp.org

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(1.) The bed of the sea or of a river (Ps. 18:15; Isa. 8:7).(2.) The "chanelbone" (Job 31:22 marg.), properly "tube" or "shaft," an old term for the collar-bone.
Source: biblegateway.com

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(1) A transmission path . (2) A set of properties that distinguishes one channel from another. For example, TV channels refer to particular frequencies at which radio waves are transmitted. IRC channe [..]
Source: webopedia.com

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tract
Source: users.ugent.be

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An electrical or photonic (for fiber optic
Source: www22.verizon.com

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A pathway along which data is transmitted electronically from one computer, terminal, or device to another. The term also refers to the physical medium carrying the signal (optical fiber, coaxial cabl [..]
Source: abc-clio.com

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1. A major area of an ISPs service, represented as a button on the main screen. Each channel usually represents a different topic or area of interest. 2. Also a term to describe the multi-level sales structure of the computer industry. 3. Microsoft's term for all the entries into the active desktop bar that is associated with IE4.X and higher, [..]
Source: csgnetwork.com (offline)

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A Channel is a specific frequency range, usually only one MHz wide and separated from other channels by as few as five MHz, that a WiFi adapter has access to at any given time. The Channel [..]
Source: datapro.net

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A channel is a narrow body of water that connects two larger bodies of water (like the English Channel). A channel is also a part of a river or harbor that is deep enough to let ships sail through.
Source: enchantedlearning.com

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A membrane protein that allows the passive flow of ions across a cell membrane. Ion channels are usually selective for a specific ion type (e.g. Na, or K, or Cl, or Ca) and or either open or closed. These are two structural states of the protein and the change from the open to the closed state (gating) is regulated by the cell. Several regulatory m [..]
Source: whatislife.com (offline)

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(n) - the portion of a stream or river surrounded by bedrock
Source: sherwoodrocks.net (offline)

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The bed of a stream or river. This can also refer to a submerged stream or river channel in a reservoir.
Source: azgfd.com

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A signal path of specified bandwidth for conveying information such as voice, data and video. Analog cable TV typically has about 80 channels in a single coaxial cable.
Source: dbmarketing.com

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Term for a length of plastic or metal that has been extruded into the shape of a U.
Source: sign-age.com

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A groove in the land that a river flows along.
Source: primaryhomeworkhelp.co.uk

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Where the water flows as a river or stream.
Source: year7geo.com

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Source: texasaquaticscience.org

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Input data to Deep Learning models can have multiple channels. The canonical examples are images, which have red, green and blue color channels. A image can be represented as a 3-dimensional Tensor wi [..]
Source: wildml.com

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path that a stream follows. characteristic -
Source: alanpedia.com

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An old term for the bridge.
Source: apassion4jazz.net (offline)

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A separate path through which voice or data can flow.
Source: telesystem.us (offline)

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The connection between two parties that transports their messages, such as a telephone or email.
Source: coiera.com

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A channel is the network path for wireless transmissions. Each Wi-Fi standard has numerous channels, each of which is a central frequency. There are 11 channels in 802.11b and g networks in the United States and Canada; 14 in most other countries. There are 9 channels in 802.11a networks in the United States, with various counts for other regions o [..]
Source: gfi.com (offline)

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One "room" on an IRC network. See also channel operator.
Source: valinor.sorcery.net

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On the IRC, an area devoted to a specific topic, sometimes referred to as a "chat room". A different meaning coming into use is a push channel, similar to a television channel, where [..]
Source: dwarfnet.com

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Channel is a generic term. The most familiar use is in television, where many broadcasting stations share the same cable into the TV set. By tuning into the right frequency, you pick up just the desir [..]
Source: mindprod.com

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1. A communications path between two computers or devices.
Source: watchguard.com

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(n) a path over which electrical signals can pass(n) a passage for water (or other fluids) to flow through(n) a long narrow furrow cut either by a natural process (such as erosion) or by a tool (as e. [..]
Source: beedictionary.com

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A channel is a general term used to describe a communications path between two systems. They may be either physical or logical depending on the application. The discrete frequency ranges ( RF channel) [..]
Source: telecomabc.com

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(1) A natural or artificial waterway of perceptible extent which either periodically or continuously contains moving water, or which forms a connecting link between two bodies of water. (2) The part of a body of water deep enough to be used for navigation through an area otherwise too shallow for navigation. (3) The deepest portion of a STREAM, BAY [..]
Source: ecy.wa.gov (offline)

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A channel is a body of water which connects two larger bodies of water.
Source: lakelubbers.com (offline)

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fossa, canalis
Source: latin-dictionary.org (offline)

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A comparatively deep waterway, natural or dredged, through a river, harbour, strait, etc, or a navigable route through shoals, which affords the best and safest passage for vessels or boats. The name [..]
Source: digimap.edina.ac.uk

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A passage for water to flow through.
Source: privateislandsonline.com

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IVEK offers both single and multiple channel configurations. A channel refers to a single Motor/Base or Actuator Module driven by a Controller Module. Single Channel systems are often bench-top units. [..]
Source: ivek.com

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A hot rolled structural shape the looks like "[". There are American Standard Channels designated by (C) and Miscellaneous Channels designated by (MC).
Source: hancockjoist.com (offline)

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The vein into which injections of a drug are made.
Source: druglibrary.org

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A telecommunications path of a specific capacity and speed between two locations in a network.
Source: centurylink.com

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An electrical path suitable for the transmission of communications between two or more points, ordinarily between two or more stations or between channel terminations in Telecommunication Company cent [..]
Source: law.cornell.edu

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A path or circuit along which information flows. Channel Bank
Source: e-ratecentral.com

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 1) a band of similar content; 2) a type of sales outlet (also known as channel of distribution), for example retail, catalogue, or e-commerce.  
Source: magazine.org (offline)

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A number that maps to a frequency;
Source: g.oswego.edu (offline)

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One piece of information stored with an image. For example, a true colour image has 3 channels, red, green and blue.
Source: all-things-photography.com

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Common name for a complete amplifying stage in any audio amplifier. Most amplifiers are denominated as 1, 2, 4, 5, or 6 channel units. Each of these is a discrete audio amp on its own, capable of taki [..]
Source: electronixwarehouse.com

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Source: musicrepo.com

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(1) A natural or artificial waterway of perceptible extent which either periodically or continuously contains moving water, or which forms a connecting link between two bodies of water. (2) The part o [..]
Source: pursuetheoutdoors.com

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Path for electrical communications between two facilities. Also called a circuit, link or path.
Source: asiasat.com.hk (offline)

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One piece of information stored with an image. True colour images, for instance, have three channels-red, green and blue. Chromatic Aberration
Source: digitalcamerawarehouse.com.au

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One piece of information stored with an image. RGB, for example, have three channels - red, green and blue. CMYK has four - cyan, magenta, Yellow and Black.
Source: pcl.co.nz

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A single piece of color information stored with an image. True color comes in 3 channels, red, green and blue.
Source: tinyprints.com (offline)

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Cell Membrane Glycoproteins that form channels to selectively pass chloride Ions. Nonselective blockers include Fenamates; Ethacrynic Acid; and Tamoxifen.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Ion Channels that are regulated by Cyclic GMP or Cyclic AMP binding and contain six transmembrane segments and an ion conducting pore that passes Monovalent Cations. They are expressed in Olfactory Ne [..]
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Potassium Channels where the flow of K+ Ions into the Cell is greater than the outward flow.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Gated, ion-selective Glycoproteins that traverse Membranes. The stimulus for Ion Channel Gating can be due to a variety of stimuli such as Ligands, a Transmembrane Potential Difference, mechanical def [..]
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Calcium Channels that are concentrated in neural Tissue. Omega toxins inhibit the actions of these channels by altering their voltage dependence.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Cell Membrane Glycoproteins that are selectively permeable to Potassium Ions. At least eight major groups of K channels exist and they are made up of dozens of different subunits.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Calcium Channels located within the Purkinje Cells of the Cerebellum. They are involved in stimulation-Secretion coupling of Neurons.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Calcium Channels located in the Neurons of the Brain.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Calcium Channels located in the Neurons of the Brain. They are inhibited by the marine Snail toxin, omega Conotoxin MVIIC.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Ion Channels that specifically allow the passage of Sodium Ions. A variety of specific Sodium channel subtypes are involved in serving specialized functIons such as neuronal signaling, CARDIAC Muscle [..]
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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A heterogenous group of transient or low voltage activated type Calcium Channels. They are found in Cardiac Myocyte Membranes, the Sinoatrial Node, Purkinje Cells of the Heart and the Central Nervous [..]
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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A navigable waterway often marked with aids to navigation; as in: Stay in the channel and you'll be safe.
Source: schoolofsailing.net

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From the Latin canal
Source: see-the-sea.org

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A flat, plank-like or platform-like projection from the side of a sailing ship that is used to spread the shrouds clear of the hull. Before 1590 its equivalent was often called a chain wale. The upper [..]
Source: ageofsail.net

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A navigable route on a waterway, usually marked by buoys. Channels are deep enough for ships or boats to navigate without running aground.
Source: caribbean-pirates.com

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A navigable route on a waterway, usually marked by buoys. Channels are similar to roads where the water is known to be deep enough for ships or boats to sail without running aground
Source: riggingandsails.com

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1. the navigable portion of a waterway where there is a known depth of water. Boats may not normally anchor in a channel   2. a horizontal timber or ledge built outboard from the side of a sailing ves [..]
Source: photographers1.com

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Portion of a waterway that is navigable and usually marked
Source: dttas.ie

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A navigable route on a waterway, usually marked by buoys. Channels are deep enough for ships or boats to navigate without running aground.
Source: marinewaypoints.com

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A shipping lane navigation
Source: morbihan-tourism.co.uk

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An input on the control transmitter that is communicated to the receiver. Inputs can be sticks, switches, or knobs. Transmitters commonly have between 4 and 9 channels. A minimum of 4 channels is requ [..]
Source: reddit.com

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Joint arrangement between the United States and a foreign government for the exchange of specific project or program-type information.
Source: acq.osd.mil (offline)

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An input or output on a PLC card that requires more then one connection point. An example is a isolated current signal channel that requires a positive and negative wire into the PLC card. See also: P [..]
Source: plcdev.com

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An open conduit either naturally or artificially created which periodically, or continuously contains moving water, or forms a connecting link between two bodies of water. River, creek, run, branch, anabranch, and tributary are some of the terms used to describe natural channels. Natural channels may be single or braided. Canal and floodway are som [..]
Source: srh.noaa.gov (offline)

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The means by which a message is communicated.
Source: speaking-tips.com

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A channel of a GPS receiver consists of the circuitry necessary to receive the signal from a single GPS satellite.
Source: nps.gov

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With respect to GPS, one channel is allocated to track one satellite. Thus, a typical 12-channel GPS receiver is capable of tracking up to 12 GPS satellites.
Source: terraperfecta.com (offline)

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A number that maps to a frequency;
Source: airfest.com

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1. An imaginary lane about 10 yards wide running the length of the field and located about ten yards in from the touch line; often exploited for diagonal runs by wing- and center-forwards, who look for a through ball to be played along it. 2. To 'channel' an opponent is to steer him or her into a more predictable, easily defended directio [..]
Source: ucs.mun.ca (offline)

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Can refer to either low-level channels in the RUDP protocol or to the "conversation" channels in Photon Chat
Source: doc.photonengine.com (offline)

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In hydrologic terms, also known as Watercourse; an open conduit either naturally or artificially created which periodically, or continuously contains moving water, or forms a connecting link between two bodies of water. River, creek, run, branch, anabranch, and tributary are some of the terms used to describe natural channels. Natural channels may [..]
Source: forecast.weather.gov (offline)

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A channel refers to an individual circuit that can be independently controlled.
Source: highcountrylights.com (offline)

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a natural or artificial watercourse that continuously or intermittently contains water, with definite bed and banks that confine all but overbanking streamflows.
Source: edwardsaquifer.net

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(verb) To control the flow of the One Power. SEE ALSO: One Power  Children of the Light
Source: wotmud.org

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See Channels
Source: lol.esportswikis.com (offline)

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see Booking Channel
Source: help.thebookingbutton.com (offline)

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A raftable route through a section of river.
Source: pinnacle-travel.org

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Each Booking in TourCMS is made against a particular Channel; it is a way of setting the language, currency and brand (amongst other settings) that the customer will experience.
Source: tourcms.com

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the course, sometimes marked by buoys, that a ship follows in open water
Source: great-lakes.net (offline)

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, The path used by a message; a means of transportation connects a sender and receiver.
Source: covalentworks.com (offline)

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A channel is a means of entry into the My Health Record system to enable reading and updating My Health Records. For example individuals can use the Consumer Portal or providers may use the system via [..]
Source: myhealthrecord.gov.au

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Generically speaking, a channel is a communications path between two or more communicating devices. Channels are also referred to as links, lines, circuits, and paths.
Source: glossary.westnetinc.com (offline)

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The name of the connector where the transducer plugs into the system.For example, Load, Strain 1 and Strain 2 are connectors for the 5900 system.
Source: instron.us (offline)

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The deepest part of a river or bay.
Source: kidscosmos.org

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A group of providers of the same type. Paid Search and Comparison Shopping are both channels.
Source: ssc.channeladvisor.com (offline)

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typically typically on spectral channel (q.v.) derived from detecting radiation at a certain well-defined wavelength.  The 12 Meteosat-8 channels are described here.
Source: satsignal.eu

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In hydrologic terms, also known as Watercourse; an open conduit either naturally or artificially created which periodically, or continuously contains moving water, or forms a connecting link between t [..]
Source: weatherdudes.com

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In charting, a price channel contains prices throughout a trend. There are three basic ways to draw channels: parallel, rounded and channels that connect lows (bear trend) or highs (bull trend).
Source: traders.com

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 – Two lines describing a series of tops and a series of bottoms which define the range of a security’s price extremes over a period of time.
Source: australianstockreport.com.au (offline)

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In charting, a price channel contains prices throughout a trend. There are three basic ways to draw channels: parallel, rounded and channels that connect lows (bear trend) or highs (bull trend).
Source: barchart.com (offline)

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A stretch of passable water through shallows or among obstructions.
Source: paddling.net (offline)

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1) In multitrack tape machines, this term means the same thing as the term Track (one audio recording made on a portion of the width of a multitrack tape). 2) A single path that an audio signal travel [..]
Source: testing1212.co.uk

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A noticeable or artificial waterway featuring periodic or continuous running water. 
Source: bluemountain1.net (offline)

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A carrier frequency assignment, usually with a fixed bandwidth. A connection between initiating and terminating nodes of a circuit.
Source: interfacebus.com

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Channel


In television, a portion of the RF spectrum 6 MHz wide which carries the audio and video carriers of the television signal.
Source: elect.mrt.ac.lk (offline)

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Channel


A structural steel component which is C-shaped in cross section.
Source: aleckassociates.co.uk

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Channel


The physical confine of a river or slough, consisting of a bed and banks. ''The water coming out of the waterwheel created a standing wave in the channel. The natural or man-made deeper course t [..]
Source: en.wiktionary.org

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Channel


(by ellipsis) the English Channel
Source: en.wiktionary.org

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Channel


Dedicated pathway for a timing impulse from a sensor such as a photocell, button, gate, etc. One dedicated channel is required for each separate piece of data collected. The more channels your timer supports, the more flexible and powerful it is.
Source: phoenix-sports.com (offline)

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Channel


A landform that contains flowing water and confined by banks which is often relatively shallow and narrow.
Source: rgs.org (offline)

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Channel


The tester functions and the path through a pin-group card and DUT fixture dedicated to one DUT pin.
Source: ateworld.com (offline)





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