All canal synonyms
ca·nal
C c noun canal
- conduit — A conduit is a small tunnel, pipe, or channel through which water or electrical wires go.
- bottleneck — A bottleneck is a place where a road becomes narrow or where it meets another road so that the traffic slows down or stops, often causing traffic jams.
- course — Course is often used in the expression 'of course', or instead of 'of course' in informal spoken English. See of course.
- duct — any tube, canal, pipe, or conduit by which a fluid, air, or other substance is conducted or conveyed.
- trench — Richard Chenevix [shen-uh-vee] /ˈʃɛn ə vi/ (Show IPA), 1807–86, English clergyman and scholar, born in Ireland.
- cove — A cove is a part of a coast where the land curves inwards so that the sea is partly enclosed.
- water — a liquid solution or preparation, especially one used for cosmetic purposes: lavender water; lemon water.
- aqueduct — An aqueduct is a long bridge with many arches, which carries a water supply or a canal over a valley.
- watercourse — a stream of water, as a river or brook.
- ditch — a long, narrow excavation made in the ground by digging, as for draining or irrigating land; trench.
- channel — A channel is a television station.
- firth — John Rupert, 1890–1960, English linguist.
- choke point — a place of greatest congestion and often hazard; bottleneck.
- waterway — a river, canal, or other body of water serving as a route or way of travel or transport.
- seaway — a way over the sea.
- tube — a hollow, usually cylindrical body of metal, glass, rubber, or other material, used especially for conveying or containing liquids or gases.
- passage — a slow, cadenced trot executed with great elevation of the feet and characterized by a moment of suspension before the feet strike the ground.
- vessel — a craft for traveling on water, now usually one larger than an ordinary rowboat; a ship or boat.