personal behavior; way of acting; bearing or deportment.
direction or management; execution: the conduct of a business.
the act of conducting; guidance; escort: The curator's conduct through the museum was informative.
Obsolete. a guide; an escort.
verb (used with object)
to behave or manage (oneself): He conducted himself well.
to direct in action or course; manage; carry on: to conduct a meeting; to conduct a test.
to direct (an orchestra, chorus, etc.) as leader.
to lead or guide; escort: to conduct a tour.
to serve as a channel or medium for (heat, electricity, sound, etc.): Copper conducts electricity.
verb (used without object)
to lead.
to act as conductor, or leader of a musical group, by communicating to the performers by motions of a baton or the hands his or her interpretation of the music.
Origin of conduct
1250–1300; late Middle English <Medieval Latin conductus escort, noun use of Latin conductus (past participle of condūcere to conduce), equivalent to con-con- + duc- lead + -tus past participle suffix; replacing Middle English conduyt(e) <Anglo-French <Latin as above; see conduit
My administration will continue to insist upon professional conduct from all our employees, regardless of their position in state government.
Alaska’s Attorney General Resigns Hours After We Published “Uncomfortable” Texts He Sent to a Younger Colleague|by Kyle Hopkins, Anchorage Daily News|August 25, 2020|ProPublica
Kondrat said Glossier’s decision to create a code of conduct for customers is also a move that other retail startups should consider emulating.
By being too customer-obsessed, DTC startups are failing their retail employees|Anna Hensel|August 21, 2020|Digiday
Irrational aspects of human behavior—chauvinistic nationalism and racial intolerance—keep us locked in patterns of conduct highly dangerous in the nuclear age, and dangerous in relation to other changes brought about by science.
From the archives: Technology and power|Katie McLean|August 19, 2020|MIT Technology Review
To many untrained observers there clearly seemed to be wrongful conduct on the part one or both of the companies.
Genius not looking so smart after Google escapes liability for ‘misappropriating’ lyrics|Greg Sterling|August 11, 2020|Search Engine Land
In 2018, an appellate court concluded that the city attorney’s office had broken the State Bar’s rules of professional conduct by breaching a suspect’s right to attorney-client privilege.
Morning Report: SDPD Has Ticketed Dozens for ‘Seditious Language’|Voice of San Diego|August 3, 2020|Voice of San Diego
There is, however, a separate wing of AQAP designed to inspire their followers to conduct attacks against the West.
U.S. Spies See Al Qaeda Fingerprints on Paris Massacre|Shane Harris, Nancy A. Youssef|January 8, 2015|DAILY BEAST
Together, they crossed over the International Bridges on foot into Juarez to conduct some business.
An Informant, a Missing American, and Juarez’s House of Death: Inside the 12-Year Cold Case of David Castro|Bill Conroy|January 6, 2015|DAILY BEAST
Before his writing days, London used the Oakland establishment to conduct his studies.
The Bars That Made America Great|Nina Strochlic|December 28, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Were they innocent victims or did they conduct themselves in a manner that would naturally lead to their demise?
The Post-Brown and Garner Question: Who ‘Deserves’ to Die?|Goldie Taylor|December 9, 2014|DAILY BEAST
I pledge to conduct a full and fair investigation and to give the grand jury all of the information necessary to do its job.
New York's Next Killer-Cop Grand Jury|Jacob Siegel|December 6, 2014|DAILY BEAST
He was of opinion that, upon their conduct at this crisis depended the future destinies of the Netherlands.
The Rise of the Dutch Republic, Volume III.(of III) 1574-84|John Lothrop Motley
Under all the circumstances the conduct of the troops was admirable.
A Virginia Village|Charles A. Stewart
Germans are born chorus singers, and their great men do not sing themselves, but conduct the singing of others.
Greifenstein|F. Marion Crawford
If we pursue this subject, it will conduct us far beyond the sight of mere temporal punishment.
Female Scripture Biographies, Vol. II|Francis Augustus Cox
Hence the motives of his conduct to Apaecides, strengthened as these were, in that instance, by his passion for Ione.
The Last Days of Pompeii|Edward George Bulwer-Lytton
British Dictionary definitions for conduct
conduct
noun (ˈkɒndʌkt)
the manner in which a person behaves; behaviour
the way of managing a business, affair, etc; handling
rarethe act of guiding or leading
rarea guide or leader
verb (kənˈdʌkt)
(tr)to accompany and guide (people, a party, etc) (esp in the phrase conducted tour)
(tr)to lead or direct (affairs, business, etc); control
(tr)to do or carry outconduct a survey
(tr)to behave or manage (oneself)the child conducted himself well
to control or guide (an orchestra, choir, etc) by the movements of the hands or a batonAlso (esp US): direct
to transmit (heat, electricity, etc)metals conduct heat
Derived forms of conduct
conductible, adjectiveconductibility, noun
Word Origin for conduct
C15: from Medieval Latin conductus escorted, from Latin: drawn together, from condūcere to conduce