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channel
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   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Legal, Financial, Idioms, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.02 sec.

channel

On a Web site, a directory of selected Web resources about a particular topic, such as personal finance, sport, or entertainment. Many search engines and portals also offer a selection of channels. Unlike directories, channels are not intended to be comprehensive but may be programmed to suit a particular kind of user. Some companies may charge to include Web sites in their channels.

channel

In business, medium and location of purchase of product or service, and of its use. Groceries, for example, can be bought through a traditional channel, the grocery store, or through a non-traditional channel, home shopping using the Internet.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
The aim is textual immediacy: Macbeth as channeler of his own downfall.
In the Bible, Moses is the channeler for the divinely revealed codes of conduct, and again the regulations are not all original.
Because the editors and most of the contributors failed to differentiate between queer and gay erotics (despite the title of the collection), they remain blind to these facts: even if it were possible for Capote to "dehomosexualize" himself, Warhol's (or anyone else's) adoring gaze quickly requeers him; and many dehomosexualized homosexuals would still be exemplars of queerness if only as contrary channelers of inspiration, thrill, and motivation, not to mention abjection and refusal.
 
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