A material through which an electric current flows easily is called an electrical conductor. Many metals, especially silver and copper, are excellent electrical conductors.
We call these materials electrical conductors, and metals are examples of electrical conductors (though the conductivity of metals varies a bit).
Copper, steel and most metals
low resistance and is a contuctor
An electrical conductor.
A Conductor
A materiel that allows an electric charge to pass through it is an conducter (copper, for example)
As unsatisfying as I'm sure you'll find this, that depends on your definition of "electricity." If you mean electricity in the most conventional sense of an electrical current, electricity can move through any medium in which charge carrying quantons (protons, elecrtons, etc) can move at least somewhat freely.
metal conducts electricity because it allows electrons to move freely as well as it has free electrons, unlike insulators(non-metals) which do not have free electrons. When the electrons are allowed to move freely in a substance, it is a good conductor and allows electric charge to flow.
Insulators.
A conductor is an object (usually a solid) that allows heat or electricity to pass through it easily by the process of conduction, which is a method of heat/electricity transfer in which heat/electricity travels through a solid material without actually causing movement of the medium. Copper, aluminium, and pretty much all metals are good conductors. Water is a conductor of electricity but an insulator of heat. An insulator is the opposite of a conductor, and absorbs heat/electricity rather than channeling it. Plastic is an insulator of both heat and electricity. Wood, styrofoam and vacuum (dead air, like in space) are also heat insulators.
A materiel that allows an electric charge to pass through it is an conducter (copper, for example)
Conductive materials such as metals allow electrons to move freely due to their delocalized electron structure. This freedom of movement is what enables the flow of electric current through a material.
A material that allows electric charges to pass through it easily is called a conductor. Conductors have mobile electrons that can move freely in response to an electric field, allowing the flow of current. Materials like metals are good conductors of electricity.
The material that allows electrons to freely pass from one atom to another is called a conductor. Conductors have loosely bound electrons that are able to move easily through the material in response to an electric field. Metals are examples of good conductors due to their abundance of free electrons.
freely permiable membrane allows everything to pass through.
conductor
A material that allows electricity to flow easily is called a conductor. Metals such as copper, aluminum, and gold are good conductors of electricity due to the presence of loosely bound electrons that can move freely through the material, facilitating the flow of electrical current.
A material that allows the flow of charges through it is called a conductor. Conductors have loosely bound electrons that can move freely in response to an electric field, facilitating the flow of electric current. Metals like copper, silver, and aluminum are common examples of conductors.
A transparent substance allows light to pass through it freely, resulting in visibility through the material. In contrast, an opaque substance blocks light from passing through, making it impossible to see through the material.
A material that allows electrons to flow easily through it is called a conductor. Examples include metals like copper, silver, and aluminum. Electrons in conductors are not tightly bound to atoms, allowing them to move freely in response to an electric field.
Trachea
The material is conductive. Metals (copper or aluminum, etc) allows charged particles of electrons to move freely in either direction along their length.