[kɐˈnaɫ]
OriginFrom German Kanal or French canal through Russian канал (kanal), ultimately from Latin canalis.
- channel (an artificial trench through which water flows)
- canal (a large man-made gap between two seas, a sea and a lake or river, along which vessels move)
- waste pipe (a pipe in a home or other building through which unclean water flows)
- sewage pipes (a system of underground facilities in a populated place for the outflow of dirty water)
- channel (a recess, a cut with a technical purpose on the surface of some body)
- duct (a cylindrical tube in a machine, facility, etc.)
- channel (channel for transmission of television, radio, telephone and telegraph signals)
- channel (a tube-like passage in an animal or plant organism through which sap, nutrients, etc. move)
- figuratively(A way to infiltrate, spread something, to arrange meetings, to connect and so on)
Formsкана́л(canonical, masculine) · kanál(romanization) · кана́л(indefinite, singular) · кана́ли(indefinite, plural) · кана́лът(definite, singular, subjective) · кана́лите(definite, plural, subjective) · кана́ла(definite, objective, singular) · кана́лите(definite, objective, plural) · -(count-form, singular) · кана́ла(count-form, plural)