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conducive
[kuhn-doo-siv, -dyoo-]
adjective
tending to produce; contributive; helpful; favorable (usually followed byto ).
Good eating habits are conducive to good health.
conducive
/ əˈːɪ /
adjective
contributing, leading, or tending
Other 51Թ Forms
- conduciveness noun
- nonconducive adjective
- nonconduciveness noun
- unconducive adjective
- unconducively adverb
- unconduciveness noun
- DzˈܳԱ noun
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of conducive1
Example Sentences
Jeremy creates this environment where it really is conducive to, I think, the best work, because he protects with everything the scene and the place where the scene is taking place.
"If the animals are in a stressful environment," Xu said of her jellyfish, "and they don't feel like... they're living in an environment that is conducive to reproduction, then they won't reproduce."
A lack of rainfall in March and April can be particularly conducive to fires.
I can say that there are some species whose characteristics make them less conducive to surveying through efforts like the Breeding Bird Survey.
The home secretary has the power to deport people who receive a shorter sentence if she decides their presence in the UK is not conducive to the public good.
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