Electricity can pass through a wide verity of material that are conductive.
Any 'conductive' material. Metal, but not plastic, for a simple example.
conductors
Insulator, or insulation, or non-conductive material. Wood, plastic and ceramic are examples of non-conductive material often used as insulators.
resistance
It is called electrical current.
Simply put an conductor is a material that lets free electrons flow through it. When free electrons are flowing that is called current. So an electrical conductor will have current pass through. Non-conductive material will not allow these electrons to flow and no electricity can be passed through. Good conductors have almost no resistance to electron flow.
Insulation is keeping the heat inside, trapping it and not letting out. Conduction is letting a flow, such as electricity, pass through the material. for example, metal is a wonderful conductor of heat and electricity, but a bad insulator. However, wool is a good insulator and a bad conductor. :) hope that helps!
Electricity".insulatorInsulatorinsulatorCurrent
it is called conductivity.
That is called a conductor.
A material that electricity can conduct electricity.
water
Metallic conductors such as copper, aluminum, silver and gold are some examples of materials through which heat and electricity can easily flow.
Depends on the material. The electricity can flow through metal better then it can through wood because wood is a conductor of electricity (example).
Wood.
A conductor allows electricity to flow. An insulator does not.
a electrical conductor is a material that electricity can flow through.
A "resistance" or "resistor".
The conductance. The reciprocal (how HARD it is for electricity to flow) is called the resistance. This is used more commonly than the conductance.