A conductor.
A materiel that allows an electric charge to pass through it is an conducter (copper, for example)
If we're talking about electrical current, then the answer is "false," because an electrical charge will flow very easily through some material, not that easily through some materials, and not at all through other materials. Usually electrical current will flow well through most metals. This is why copper wire is used to carry electricity, because copper allows electricity to flow with little resistance. If EVERY material in the world let electricity flow through it, we would be getting shocked all the time. Plastic and rubber, for instance, are very very resistant to electrical charges. If plastic and rubber allowed electricity to pass in them as easily as copper, you'd get an incredible shock every time you tried to touch your computer, put your finger on a light switch or answered your phone!
Copper is very good conductor of electric charge. That is why it is invariably used in the electric motors.
Metallic conductors such as copper, aluminum, silver and gold are some examples of materials through which heat and electricity can easily flow.
A material through which an electric current flows easily is called an electrical conductor. Many metals, especially silver and copper, are excellent electrical conductors.
Translucent materials allows light to pass through it. Windows is a translucent material because it allows light to pass through it
Translucent materials allows light to pass through it. Windows is a translucent material because it allows light to pass through it
the answer is transparent material
A conductor, by definition, allows electrical current flow. Some better than others, gold better than copper, copper better than aluminum, etc.
An electrolite
translucent
Cloth allows air transfer through the stitches.