Reverse Dictionary: CHANNEL

NOUNS
1350 — RUNNING a channel in which water may flow; a stream, a rivulet → obs.
1549 — KYLE a narrow channel between two islands, or an island and the mainland; a sound, a strait → Sc.
1561 — CANNEL channel, passage → obs.
1584 — FAIRWAY a navigable channel in a river or between rocks, sandbanks, etc.; the usual course or passage of a vessel on the sea or in entering and leaving a harbour 
1606 — VEIN a channel or lane of water 
1639 — KILL a channel, a creek, a stream, a natural waterway → Amer. dial.
1699 — THOROUGHFARE a channel, a waterway connecting two larger bodies of water → Amer. dial.
1720 — NAVIGATION a natural inland channel → obs.
1723 — GAT — GATE a channel, a strait; an opening between sandbanks 
1746 — RIGGOT a channel or drain made in the surface of the ground; a gutter, a rain-spout
1809 — THRUM a narrow channel or passage between rocks, through which water runs → Sc. & Eng. dial.
1883 — FARE-WAY a navigable channel in a river or between rocks, sandbanks, etc.; the usual course or passage of a vessel on the sea or in entering and leaving a harbour 
1897 — SCOUR a channel, a race or run of water → Sc.