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conduct
noun as in administration
Strongest matches
charge, handling, management, manipulation, oversight, plan, policy, strategy, transaction, treatment
Strong matches
care, channels, control, direction, execution, guidance, leadership, organization, posture, regimen, regulation, rule, running, superintendence, supervision, tactics, wielding
Weak matches
noun as in behavior
verb as in administer
Strongest matches
attend, control, direct, handle, keep, manage, operate, order, organize, oversee, regulate, run, supervise
Strong matches
accompany, chair, chaperon, convey, engineer, escort, govern, guide, head, lead, ordain, pilot, rule, shepherd, steer, usher
Weak matches
call the tune, carry on, preside over, ride herd on, run things, trailblaze, wield baton
verb as in comport oneself
Example Sentences
Geoff Collins, UK general manager of camera developer Acusensus, said: "We are delighted to be conducting the world's first trials of this technology right here in Devon and Cornwall."
These actions include conducting monthly anonymous employee surveys, implementing an independent whistleblower function, strengthening the management team and carrying out an independent workplace assessment with an external psychologist.
Prosecutors acknowledged in a sentencing memo that years had passed since the criminal conduct in the case but maintained Rundo “has not renounced the violent extremist ideology that motivated that conduct.”
Ms Boston was charged with threats to conduct a mass shooting or act of terrorism.
The court ruled that a federal civil lawsuit over a sitting president's unofficial conduct could proceed during the presidency.
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When To Use
What are other ways to say conduct?
To conduct is to precede or escort to a place, sometimes with a degree of ceremony: to conduct a guest to his room. Guide implies continuous presence or agency in showing or indicating a course: to guide a traveler. To direct is to give information for guidance, or instructions or orders for a course of procedure: to direct someone to the station. To lead is to bring onward in a course, guiding by contact or by going in advance; hence, figuratively, to influence or induce to some course of conduct: to lead a procession; to lead astray.
From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
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