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channel vs limbers

limbers vs channel

channel and limbers both are nouns.

channel is a verb but limbers is not a verb.

Word NounAdjectiveVerbAdverb
channel Yes No Yes No
limbers Yes No No No
As nouns, limbers is a hyponym of channel; that is, limbers is a word with a more specific, narrower meaning than channel:
  • channel: a passage for water (or other fluids) to flow through
  • limbers: a channel or gutter on either side of a ship's keelson; carries bilge water into the pump well
Other hyponyms of channel include gutter, trough.
channel (noun) limbers (noun)
a way of selling a company's product either directly or via distributors a channel or gutter on either side of a ship's keelson; carries bilge water into the pump well
a passage for water (or other fluids) to flow through
a television station and its programs
a bodily passage or tube lined with epithelial cells and conveying a secretion or other substance
a path over which electrical signals can pass
(often plural) a means of communication or access
a deep and relatively narrow body of water (as in a river or a harbor or a strait linking two larger bodies) that allows the best passage for vessels
a long narrow furrow cut either by a natural process (such as erosion) or by a tool (as e.g. a groove in a phonograph record)
channel (verb) limbers (verb)
send from one person or place to another
direct the flow of
transmit or serve as the medium for transmission
Difference between channel and limbers

Words related to "channel"

Words related to "limbers"


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