The Collaborative International Dictionary
electric charge \electric charge\, electrical charge \electrical charge\, same as electricity[1].
Usage examples of "electrical charge".
Yet, those reports keep coming in from what would seem to be reputable sources of pendulums doing things they're not supposed to under certain conditions of electrical charge and during solar eclipses, when the Sun is obscured.
Then there was that other awareness, the physical awareness that was like an electrical charge, making his skin tingle with pleasure and excitement at her closeness, or even at the mere thought of her.
After eating through the copper plate-- the thickness governed a delayed sequence of one hour-- the acidic compound would then attack the copper in the barometric switch, eventually creating an electrical charge that would set off the firing signal and detonate the bomb.
The return part is necessary so that an electrical charge does not collect at any point in the circuit.
It felt like a really hot electrical charge going through my whole body.
Energy seemed to coil within her like an electrical charge building for explosive release.
If you add a neutron - that has no electrical charge - to the hydrogen atom, you get deuterium.
At this slaughterhouse, cattle were normally stunned with an electrical charge before being killed.
Every atom is made from three kinds of elementary particles: protons, which have a positive electrical charge.
He did so warily, carrying a sensitive device, brought from the gyro, which would detect the presence of any wire carrying even a minute electrical charge.
The outside of an atom in my elbow has a negative electrical charge.
The operator at the receiving end sees only a slow upward trend in electrical charge, instead of a crisp jump.
Some kind of electrical charge running through it-probably one of those hyperglass things, meant to keep anyone from firing a missile through it and blowing up Jongleur and this madhouse of his.