conduct

/ˈkɒndʌkt/
noun 5verb 5

Collocations

26
1

(noun.) behaviour

ADJ

good

The teacher praised the students for their good conduct during the school trip.

discreditable, disgraceful, immoral, improper, ungentlemanly, unprofessional, unseemly | aggressive, violent | criminal, fraudulent, illegal, negligent, unlawful, wrongful | homosexual, sexual | personal

business, professional

The company's professional conduct during the scandal impressed both employees and customers alike.

police

human

The school has clear rules about what counts as acceptable human conduct in the classroom.

VERB + CONDUCT

engage in

The police are investigating whether the officer engaged in misconduct during the arrest.

regulate

The school has strict rules to regulate student conduct during lunch breaks.

explain

The teacher asked the student to explain his conduct during the field trip.

CONDUCT + VERB

constitute sth

The teacher's behavior toward students constituted a serious breach of professional conduct.

PREP

~ by

The investigation was led by authorities concerned about the aggressive conduct by the football fans.

~ towards

The teacher's conduct towards new students was always respectful and encouraging.

PHRASES

a code of conduct, rules of conduct, standards of conduct

2

(noun.) management of sth

ADJ

proper

The teacher praised the students for their proper conduct during the school trip.

day-to-day

The principal praised the teacher for her excellent day-to-day conduct of classroom activities.

3

(verb.) organize sth/carry sth out

ADV

independently

The research was independently conducted by scientists from three different universities.

personally | properly | successfully

4

(verb.) lead/guide sb

ADV

personally

The mayor personally conducted the meeting to address concerns from local residents.

PREP

along, around/round, down, through, to, etc.

The teacher conducted the students through the science lab to show them the new equipment.

5

(verb.) conduct yourself: behave

ADV

honourably, well, with dignity

Even during the difficult meeting, he conducted himself honourably and earned everyone's respect.

6

(verb.) heat/electricity

ADV

well

The orchestra conductor led the performance well, earning enthusiastic applause from the audience.

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