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Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- adjective Of, relating to, producing, or operated by electricity.
- adjective Of or related to sound created or altered by an electrical or electronic device.
- adjective Amplified by an electronic device.
- adjective Emotionally exciting; thrilling.
- adjective Exceptionally tense; highly charged with emotion.
- noun An electrically powered machine or vehicle.
from The Century Dictionary.
- See
motor . - noun A railway or car operated by electricity: usually in the plural.
- Containing electricity, or capable of exhibiting it when excited by friction: as, an electric body, such as amber or glass.
- Pertaining to or consisting in electricity: as, electric power; an electric discharge.
- Derived from or produced by electricity: as, an electric shock; an electric light.
- Conveying electricity; producing electricity; communicating a shock by electricity: as, an electric machine; electric wires; the electric eel or fish.
- Operated by electricity: as, an electric bell; an electric railway.
- Figuratively, full of fire, spirit, or passion, and capable of communicating it to others; magnetic.
- noun A body or substance capable of exhibiting electricity by means of friction or otherwise, and of resisting the passage of it from one body to another. See
electricity .
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun (Physics) A nonconductor of electricity, as amber, glass, resin, etc., employed to excite or accumulate electricity.
- adjective Pertaining to electricity; consisting of, containing, derived from, or produced by, electricity
- adjective Capable of occasioning the phenomena of electricity.
- adjective Electrifying; thrilling; magnetic.
- adjective powered by electricity.
- adjective See under
Aura . - adjective See
Battery . - adjective See under
Brush . - adjective See Telegraph cable, under
Telegraph . - adjective See under
Candle . - adjective (Zoöl.) one of three or more large species of African catfish of the genus Malapterurus (esp.
M. electricus of the Nile). They have a large electrical organ and are able to give powerful shocks; -- called alsosheathfish . - adjective See under
Clock , and seeElectro-chronograph . - adjective a current or stream of electricity traversing a closed circuit formed of conducting substances, or passing by means of conductors from one body to another which is in a different electrical state.
- adjective (Zoöl.) a South American eel-like fresh-water fish of the genus Gymnotus (
G. electricus ), from two to five feet in length, capable of giving a violent electric shock. SeeGymnotus . - adjective (Zoöl.) any fish which has an electrical organ by means of which it can give an electrical shock. The best known kinds are the
torpedo , thegymnotus , orelectrical eel , and theelectric cat . SeeTorpedo , andGymnotus . - adjective [archaic] the supposed matter of electricity; lightning.
- adjective (Elec.) a collection of electrical points regarded as forming, by an analogy with optical phenomena, an image of certain other electrical points, and used in the solution of electrical problems.
- adjective an apparatus for generating, collecting, or exciting, electricity, as by friction.
- adjective See
Electro-motor , 2. - adjective (Physics) See under
Osmose . - adjective a hand pen for making perforated stencils for multiplying writings. It has a puncturing needle driven at great speed by a very small magneto-electric engine on the penhandle.
- adjective a railway in which the machinery for moving the cars is driven by an electric current.
- adjective (Zoöl.) the torpedo.
- adjective See
Telegraph .
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adjective Of, relating to, produced by, operated with, or utilising
electricity ;electrical . - adjective Of, or relating to an
electronic version of amusical instrument that has anacoustic equivalent. - adjective Being
emotionally thrilling ;electrifying . - adjective Drawing electricity from an external source; not battery-operated; corded.
- noun informal
Electricity . - noun rare An electric
car .
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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However, with incomparably higher frequencies, which we may yet find means to produce efficiently, and provided that electric impulses of such high frequencies could be transmitted through a conductor, the electrical characteristics of the brush discharge would completely vanish -- no spark would pass, no shock would be felt -- yet we would still have to deal with an _electric_ phenomenon, but in the broad, modern interpretation of the word.
Experiments with Alternate Currents of High Potential and High Frequency Nikola Tesla 1899
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The term electric radiation was first employed by Hertz to designate waves emitted by a Leyden jar or oscillator system of an induction coil, but since that time these radiations have been known as Hertzian waves.
Marvels of Modern Science Paul Severing
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I had two thoughts when I first heard the phrase "electric sundown."
The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com Jason Hughes 2012
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I had two thoughts when I first heard the phrase "electric sundown."
The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com Jason Hughes 2012
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As Matouse said the Rapalla electric is a good knife for bulk work.
What is the best fillet knife to purchase? I have a couple but they need sharpened so often. 2009
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As Matouse said the Rapalla electric is a good knife for bulk work.
What is the best fillet knife to purchase? I have a couple but they need sharpened so often. 2009
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Some of us are not driving, some are trading in SUVs for hybrids, and some are looking in a completely different direction, towards what they call electric cars.
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This is the dazzling bright light which we call electric light.
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_ So, when the conductor is not so good; when a large wire is reduced suddenly to a small one; when a good conductor, such as copper, has a section of resisting conduction, such as carbon; heat and light are at once evolved at that point, and there is produced what we know as the electric light.
Steam, Steel and Electricity James W. Steele
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That electromotive force acting on a dielectric produces what we call electric displacement.
The World's Greatest Books — Volume 15 — Science Various 1909
Related Words
synonyms (61)
Words with the same meaning
- Amtrak
- baggage train
- cable railroad
- charged
- choo-choo
- cog railroad
- cog railway
- el
- electric car
- electric train
- electrifying
- elevated
- energized
- exciting
- express
- express train
- faradaic
- flier
- freight
- freight train
- freighter
- funicular
- galvanizing
- goods train
- interurban
- lightning express
- limited
- local
- magnetic
- metro
- milk train
- monorail
- moving
- parliamentary
- parliamentary train
- passenger train
- piezoelectric
- rack-and-pinion railroad
- railroad train
- rattler
- rolling stock
- shuttle
- shuttle train
- special
- stimulating
- stirring
- streamliner
- streetcar
- subway
- tense
- thermoelectric
- thrilling
- train
- tram
- tramcar
- trolley
- trolley car
- tube
- underground
- voltaic
- way train
equivalents (6)
Other words for 'electric'
hypernyms (5)
Words that are more generic or abstract
same context (8)
Words that are found in similar contexts
forms (6)
Forms
cross-references (34)
Cross-references
- dynamo-electric machine
- electric absorption
- electric action
- electric alarm
- electric annunciator
- electric apparatus
- electric arc
- electric atmosphere
- electric bridge
- electric chorea
- electric efficiency
- electric field
- electric force
- electric inertia
- electric lamp
- electric light
- electric log
- electric machine
- electric meter
- electric motor
- electric organ
- electric osmose
- electric pendulum
- electric piano
- electric railway
- electric steel process
- electric storm
- electric sunstroke
- electric tension
- electric-telegraph cable
- exciting
- stimulating
- thrilling
- to excite an electric
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