The difference between Channel and Passage

When used as nouns, channel means the physical confine of a river or slough, consisting of a bed and banks, whereas passage means a paragraph or section of text or music with particular meaning.

When used as verbs, channel means to make or cut a channel or groove in, whereas passage means to pass something, such as a pathogen or stem cell, through a host or medium.


check bellow for the other definitions of Channel and Passage

  1. Channel as a noun:

    The physical confine of a river or slough, consisting of a bed and banks.

    Examples:

    "The water coming out of the waterwheel created a standing wave in the channel."

  2. Channel as a noun:

    The natural or man-made deeper course through a reef, bar, bay, or any shallow body of water.

    Examples:

    "A channel was dredged to allow ocean-going vessels to reach the city."

  3. Channel as a noun:

    The navigable part of a river.

    Examples:

    "We were careful to keep our boat in the channel."

  4. Channel as a noun:

    A narrow body of water between two land masses.

    Examples:

    "The English Channel lies between France and England."

  5. Channel as a noun:

    That through which anything passes; means of conveying or transmitting.

    Examples:

    "The news was conveyed to us by different channels."

  6. Channel as a noun:

    A gutter; a groove, as in a fluted column.

  7. Channel as a noun (electronics):

    A connection between initiating and terminating nodes of a circuit.

    Examples:

    "The guard-rail provided the channel between the downed wire and the tree."

  8. Channel as a noun (electronics):

    The narrow conducting portion of a MOSFET transistor.

  9. Channel as a noun (communication):

    The part that connects a data source to a data sink.

    Examples:

    "A channel stretches between them."

  10. Channel as a noun (communication):

    A path for conveying electrical or electromagnetic signals, usually distinguished from other parallel paths.

    Examples:

    "We are using one of the 24 channels."

  11. Channel as a noun (communication):

    A single path provided by a transmission medium via physical separation, such as by multipair cable.

    Examples:

    "The channel is created by bonding the signals from these four pairs."

  12. Channel as a noun (communication):

    A single path provided by a transmission medium via spectral or protocol separation, such as by frequency or time-division multiplexing.

    Examples:

    "Their call is being carried on channel 6 of the T-1 line."

  13. Channel as a noun (broadcasting):

    A specific radio frequency or band of frequencies, usually in conjunction with a predetermined letter, number, or codeword, and allocated by international agreement.

    Examples:

    "KNDD is the channel at 107.7 MHz in Seattle."

  14. Channel as a noun (broadcasting):

    A specific radio frequency or band of frequencies used for transmitting television.

    Examples:

    "NBC is on channel 11 in San Jose."

  15. Channel as a noun (storage):

    The portion of a storage medium, such as a track or a band, that is accessible to a given reading or writing station or head.

    Examples:

    "This chip in this disk drive is the channel device."

  16. Channel as a noun (technic):

    The way in a turbine pump where the pressure is built up.

    Examples:

    "The liquid is pressurized in the lateral channel."

  17. Channel as a noun (business, marketing):

    A distribution channel

  18. Channel as a noun (Internet):

    A particular area for conversations on an IRC network, analogous to a chatroom and often dedicated to a specific topic.

  19. Channel as a noun (Internet):

    An obsolete means of delivering up-to-date Internet content.

  20. Channel as a noun:

    A psychic or medium who temporarily takes on the personality of somebody else.

  1. Channel as a verb (transitive):

    To make or cut a channel or groove in.

  2. Channel as a verb (transitive):

    To direct or guide along a desired course.

    Examples:

    "We will channel the traffic to the left with these cones."

  3. Channel as a verb (transitive, of a spirit, as of a dead person):

    To serve as a medium for.

    Examples:

    "She was channeling the spirit of her late husband, Seth."

  4. Channel as a verb (transitive):

    To follow as a model, especially in a performance.

    Examples:

    "He was trying to channel President Reagan, but the audience wasn't buying it."

    "When it is my turn to sing karaoke, I am going to channel Ray Charles."

  1. Channel as a noun (nautical):

    The wale of a sailing ship which projects beyond the gunwale and to which the shrouds attach via the chains. One of the flat ledges of heavy plank bolted edgewise to the outside of a vessel, to increase the spread of the shrouds and carry them clear of the bulwarks.

  1. Passage as a noun:

    A paragraph or section of text or music with particular meaning.

    Examples:

    "passage of scripture"

    "She struggled to play the difficult passages."

  2. Passage as a noun:

    Part of a path or journey.

    Examples:

    "He made his passage through the trees carefully, mindful of the stickers."

  3. Passage as a noun:

    The official approval of a bill or act by a parliament.

    Examples:

    "The company was one of the prime movers in lobbying for the passage of the act."

  4. Passage as a noun (art):

    The use of tight brushwork to link objects in separate spatial plains. Commonly seen in Cubist works.

  5. Passage as a noun:

    A passageway or corridor.

  6. Passage as a noun (caving):

    An underground cavity, formed by water or falling rocks, which is much longer than it is wide.

  7. Passage as a noun (euphemistic):

    The vagina.

  8. Passage as a noun:

    The act of passing

  1. Passage as a verb (medicine):

    To pass something, such as a pathogen or stem cell, through a host or medium

    Examples:

    "He passaged the virus through a series of goats."

    "After 24 hours, the culture was passaged to an agar plate."

  2. Passage as a verb (rare):

    To make a passage, especially by sea; to cross

    Examples:

    "They passaged to America in 1902."

  1. Passage as a noun (dressage):

    A movement in classical dressage, in which the horse performs a very collected, energetic, and elevated trot that has a longer period of suspension between each foot fall than a working trot.

  1. Passage as a verb (intransitive, dressage):

    To execute a passage movement

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