recharge
IPA: ritʃˈɑrdʒ
noun
- (uncountable) Water that has percolated from the ground surface to an aquifer.
- (countable) The process of charging (an electrical device) again.
verb
- (transitive) To charge an electric battery after its power has been consumed.
- (intransitive) To invigorate and revitalize one's energy level by removing stressful agents for a period of time.
- (transitive) To reload a gun with ammunition.
- (transitive) To add or restore water to an aquifer.
- (transitive) To request payment again from.
- To charge or accuse in return.
- To attack again or anew.
Advertisement
Examples of "recharge" in Sentences
- I recharged my cellphone.
- I always recharge my laptop.
- The generator is used to recharge the batteries.
- Sometimes the only way to recharge is to pull the plug.
- The car has the ability to recharge the battery under braking.
- This enabled the salvagers to recharge the submarine's batteries.
- It is the weakest in terms of power, but the fastest to recharge.
- Upon recharge of the battery, the sulfate returns to the electrolyte.
- The capacitor is then cooled and recharged and the cycle is repeated.
- The engine, once running, powers the compressor to recharge the tank.
- The lagoon provides groundwater recharge of the aquifer and recreation.
- They at least have to be stopping somewhere to recharge, which is good.
- Place it back in its docking station and it’ll recharge from the D batteries.
- So there was a short-term recharge of tropical Pacific Ocean Heat Content in 1995/96, which is very evident in Figure 3.
- To make matters worse, the drive is stuck in recharge mode so that every time it hits 100% the ship jumps to a new dimension.
- Plug-in hybrids will use larger battery packs and recharge from a household outlet for 10 to 30 miles of electric-only driving.
- I am currently using Optus and have so-far loaded $140 of credit on in a week, because the service re-directs to a page which says recharge is necessary.
- V Because the core of a fully-functioning tower maintains an isochronic/isotemporal barrier of approximately 1,000 nanoseconds, this temporal "dislocation" effectively provides not only the points of energy polarity which generate the raw power, as described above, and an insulation from the local temporality, but what can also be loosely described as a recharge impact on local spatio-temporal random-amplitude "chaotic" energy events ....
Advertisement
Advertisement