Meaning Current
What does Current mean? Here you find 169 meanings of the word Current. You can also add a definition of Current yourself

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Current


  A flow of electrons in an electrical conductor. The strength or rate of movement of the electricity is measured in amperes.
Source: eia.gov

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Current


A horizontal movement of water. Currents may be classified as tidal and nontidal. Tidal currents are caused by gravitational interactions between the sun, moon, and earth and are a part of the same ge [..]
Source: w1.weather.gov

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Current


c. 1300, "running, flowing," from Old French corant "running, lively, eager, swift," present participle of corre "to run," from Latin currere "to run, move quickly&q [..]
Source: etymonline.com

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Current


late 14c., from Middle French corant (Modern French courant), from Old French corant (see current (adj.)). Applied 1747 to the flow of electrical force.
Source: etymonline.com

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Current


Current is the measure of the flow of electrons in an electrical circuit. Current is usually measured in engineering units called amperes, which indicate how much electrical energy is flowing through the circuit.
Source: pipelineawareness.org (offline)

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Current


A flow of electrons in an electrical conductor. The rate of movement of the electricity, measured in amperes.
Source: platts.com

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Current


steady, predictable flow of fluid within a larger body of that fluid. Read more in the NG Education Encyclopedia
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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Current


occurring in or belonging to the present time; "current events"; "the current topic"; "current negotiations"; &quo [..]
Source: google-dictionary.so8848.com

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Current


The rate of flow of electricity. The unit is the ampere (A), which equals one coulomb per second.
Source: omega.com

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Current


The rate at which electrons flow through a circuit is defined as the current. If an electric circuit is likened to water flowing through a system of pipes, the current is analogous to the rate at which the water is flowing. Electric current is measured in amps.
Source: abb.com (offline)

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Current


(Referring to information) Up to date.
Source: qaa.ac.uk (offline)

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Current


Current is the rate of flow of electricity. The unit of current is the ampere (A) which is defined as 1 ampere = 1 coulomb per second.
Source: chemistry.about.com

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Current


haynttsaytik
Source: yiddishdictionaryonline.com (offline)

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Current


The rate of transfer of electricity normally expressed in Amperes (Coulombs per second).
Source: aiche.org

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Current


The rate of electrical current flow.
Source: wilsonselectronics.net

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Current


The time rate at which charge passes through a circuit element or through a fixed place in a conducting wire, I = dq/dt.
Source: lhup.edu

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Current


The rate of transfer of electricity. Practical unit is the ampere which represents the transfer of one coulomb per second. In a simple circuit, current (I) produced by a cell or electromotive force (E) when there is an external resistance (R) and internal resistance (r) is: I=E/R%2Br
Source: southwire.com (offline)

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Current


The rate of flow of electric charge; I = q/t.
Source: college.cengage.com

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Current


Flow of electrons past a point in a specified period of time; measured in amperes.
Source: scalesu.com

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Current


The rate of flow of electrical energy through a conductor or wire, comparable to the amount of water flowing in a pipe. Electric current is measured in amperes or “amps”
Source: dsmt.com

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Current


The flow of particles charged by electricity.  
Source: dieselserviceandsupply.com (offline)

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Current


The portion of a stream or body of water, which is moving much faster than the rest of the water. The progress of the water is principally concentrated in the current.
Source: lenntech.com

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Current


The flow of the river.
Source: primaryhomeworkhelp.co.uk

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Current


The movement - or flow- of electrons.
Source: stirlingaudioservices.com

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Current

Source: texasaquaticscience.org

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Current


The time rate at which charge passes through a circuit element or through a fixed place in a conducting wire, I = dq/dt.
Source: physlink.com

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Current


Electrical current is the rate of flow of electrical charge round a circuit. It is measured in amperes and should be measured in series with an ammeter. See also: Ohm's Law
Source: frankswebspace.org.uk

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Current


UE, EL, EM Electrical current is the rate of flow of electrical charge round a circuit. It is measured in amperes and should be measured in series with an ammeter. See also: Ohm's Law
Source: users.zetnet.co.uk

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Current


When your account has been paid up to date and there are no past dues remaining.
Source: 995hope.org (offline)

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Current


(n) a flow of electricity through a conductor(n) a steady flow of a fluid (usually from natural causes)(n) dominant course (suggestive of running water) of successive events or ideas(adj) occurring in [..]
Source: beedictionary.com

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Current


(1) The flowing of water, or other liquid or gas. (2) That portion of a STREAM of water which is moving with a velocity much greater than the average or in which the progress of the water is principally concentrated. (3) OCEAN CURRENTS can be classified in a number of different ways. Some important types include the following:
Source: ecy.wa.gov (offline)

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Current


See Amperage.
Source: otherpower.com

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Current


Any current in the littoral zone caused primarily by wave action, i.e., longshore currrent, rip current. Current, Longshore
Source: beach-net.com

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Current


Generally, a horizontal movement of water. Currents may be classified as tidal and non-tidal. Tidal currents are caused by gravitational interactions between the Sun, Moon, and Earth and are part of t [..]
Source: tides.gc.ca

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Current


 - The movement of electrons in a conductor measured in Amperes.
Source: youngco.com (offline)

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Current


The flow of electricity through a conductor.
Source: enwin.com (offline)

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Current


 The rate of flow of electricity in a circuit, measured in amps.
Source: pacificpower.net

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Current


an electric current is something that exists in a closed electrical circuit and is measured using an ammeter. It is not the same as energy or voltage. The name is analogous with water current in a river or an air current which is moving air. What moves in an electric current is electrically charged particles, inside a conductor, whose total charge [..]
Source: physics.usyd.edu.au (offline)

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Current


The flow of electricity in a conductor. Current is measured in amperes. Demand Charge The component of a two-part price for electricity that is based on a customer's highest power demand reached [..]
Source: electricity.ca

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Current


The movement or flow of electricity through a conductor.
Source: jcpb.com (offline)

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Current


The flow of electrons. Water flowing in a pipe is also current. Voltage is required to make electricity flow, just as water pressure is required to make water flow.
Source: powerwater.com.au (offline)

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Current


A flow of electrons in an electrical conductor. The strength or rate of movement of the electricity is measured in amperes. A generic term usually modified by an adjective (i.e., AC or DC), the amount [..]
Source: carlingtech.com

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Current


See electric current.
Source: carmanah.com

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Current


The flow of electricity commonly measured in amperes.
Source: ajdanboise.com (offline)

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Current


A continuous movement of ocean water in s specific direction. Currents have been likened to rivers within the larger ocean itself. Famous currents include the Gulf Stream (Eastern North America and We [..]
Source: tidalpower.co.uk

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Current


 A flow of electrons in an electrical conductor. The strength or rate of movement of the electricity is measured in amperes.
Source: sunflower.net (offline)

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Current


The rate at which charged electrons move past a given place in an electric circuit. The current of an electrical charge is typically measured in amperes.
Source: history.alberta.ca

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Current


The flow of electricity in a conductor. Current is measured in amperes.
Source: burstenergy.ca

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Current


Movement of electricity along a conductor. Current is measured in amperes.
Source: swtc.edu

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Current


It is the current and the duration and rate of its flow which causes a Shock. Increasing the voltage increases the current. Current decreases as resistance increases. Measured in Amps
Source: leadingedgepower.com (offline)

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Current


The rate of flow of electrical charge. The flow of current is measured in amps.
Source: xantrex.com

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Current


The ‘volume’ of electricity flowing in a circuit which is expressed in Amps.
Source: upssystems.co.uk

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Current


The movement of electrons through a conductor. Measured in amperes and its symbol is “I”.
Source: mtecorp.com

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Current


The flow of electric charge in a conductor between two points having a difference in potential (voltage).
Source: sunlightelectric.com

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Current


The amount of electricity flowing through an electrical circuit. This is measured in Amps.
Source: dkasolarcentre.com.au

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Current


a flow of electrons through a conductor.
Source: megavolt.co.il

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Current


The rate of flow of electrons, measured in amperes.
Source: price-electric.com (offline)

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Current


The rate of flow of electric charge, usually expressed in amps (or amperes)
Source: clipsal.com (offline)

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Current


The flow of electric charge between two points, measured in amps.
Source: pvpower.com (offline)

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Current


        A directional flow of a body of water, usually fast enough to take
Source: 20thcenturyliners.com (offline)

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Current


The horizontal movement of water.
Source: boatsafe.com

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Current


The drift of the current is the rate per hour at which the current runs.
Source: bartleby.com

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Current


the movement or flow of electric charges
Source: reekoscience.com (offline)

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Current


The movement of electricity through a conductor. It is measured in amperes.
Source: teeic.indianaffairs.gov (offline)

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Current


The flow of electrons through a conducting material. By convention, current is considered to flow from positive to negative potential. The electrons, however, actually flow in the opposite direction. [..]
Source: calnetix.com

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Current


The non-tidal horizontal movement of the sea which may be in the upper, lower or in all layers. in some areas this movement may be nearly constant in rate and direction while in others it may vary sea [..]
Source: digimap.edina.ac.uk

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Current


The horizontal movement of water.
Source: sailinglinks.com

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Current


Also know as electric current, this is the flow of particles charged by electricity. One of the effects that electric currents have is to induce magnetic fields, which are used for generators.
Source: globalpwr.com

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Current


A flow of electrons in an electrical conductor. The strength or rate of movement of the electricity is measured in amperes.
Source: constellation.com

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Current


the flow of electricity commonly measured in amperes.
Source: nooutage.com

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Current


     The rate of flow of electrons through a conductor or component; measured in amperes.  The symbol (I) stands for intensity of the electron flow.
Source: nwscc.edu (offline)

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Current


The flow rate of electricity.Cycle One complete reversal of alternating current of voltage, from zero to a positive maximum to zero to a negative maximum back to zero . The number of cycles per second [..]
Source: generatorjoe.net

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Current


The amount of power drawn by an appliance - see Ampere.
Source: diydata.com

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Current


  The flow of electricity in a circuit. The term current refers to the quantity, volume or intensity of electrical flow, as opposed to voltage, which refers to the force or "pressure" causing the current flow. Current may be either direct (DC) or alternating (AC). Direct current refers to current whose voltage causes it to flow in only on [..]
Source: sigmasixsolutions.com (offline)

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Current


 DC current that maintains the battery at nominal charge, corresponding to the float voltage. This current compensates open circuit losses.
Source: sigmasixsolutions.com (offline)

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Current


 Temporary current observed in a network when electrical devices are first energized, generally due to the magnetic circuits of the devices. The effect is measured by the current’s maximum peak value and the RMS current value it generates.
Source: sigmasixsolutions.com (offline)

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Current


Flow of electrical energy.
Source: rsmck.com

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Current


The directed flow of electrical charges from one point to another around a closed electrical circuit. Current is measures in units called amperes or amps.
Source: eaton.com (offline)

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Current


is the rate of flow of electrons in a circuit measured in amperes (unit A).
Source: standexelectronics.com

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Current


is alternating current flow from positive to negative.
Source: standexelectronics.com

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Current


is current flow in one direction.
Source: standexelectronics.com

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Current


is the amount of current that can safely be passed through closed switch contacts.
Source: standexelectronics.com

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Current


is the surge of current a load may draw at initial turn on and may be many times greater than the steady current draw.
Source: standexelectronics.com

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Current


Term used to describe electrical flow.
Source: thehouseplanshop.com

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Current


The flow of electrons in a conductor.
Source: industry.usa.siemens.com (offline)

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Current


The flow of electricity commonly measured in amperes.
Source: shockelectric.com

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Current


The flow of electric charge.
Source: a-m-c.com

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Current


the flow of an electric charge through a medium.
Source: curriculum.vexrobotics.com (offline)

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Current


The flow of electricity commonly measured in amperes.
Source: kielectrical.net

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Current


The flow of electricity through a conductor, measured in Amperes.
Source: microhydro.ie (offline)

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Current


The flow of electrons through a conductor.
Source: greatriverenergy.com (offline)

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Current


A measure of how much electricity passes a point on a wire in a given time frame. Current is measured in amperes.
Source: e-ratecentral.com

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Current


The flow of electric charge.
Source: teach21.org (offline)

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Current


  Current is the flow of electrons in an electric conductor.
Source: impa.com (offline)

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Current


An electric current is the movement of an electric charge.
Source: pjm.com

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Current


The flow of charged particles through a conductive material.
Source: basinelectric.com (offline)

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Current


The rate of flow of electric charge in a conductor, which is measured in amperes or amps.
Source: pegasuslighting.com (offline)

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Current


The movement or flow of electricity.
Source: e-smartonline.net

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Current


Current is the flow of electricity expressed in amperes. Current refers to the quantity or intensity of electricity flow, whereas voltage refers to the pressure or force causing the electrical flow.
Source: sunpower-uk.com

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Current


The flow of electric charge through a conductor as a result of the movement of electrons. The symbol is I and unit is the ampere.
Source: powerengineering.org (offline)

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Current

Source: gogreensolar.com

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Current


This means the vehicle is currently taxed or has provision to be taxed and is on our roads.
Source: cartell.ie

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Current


The rate of flow of electricity, or the movement of electrons along a conductor. It is comparable to the flow of a stream of water. The unit of measure for current is the ampere.
Source: autobatteries.com

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Current


A current that varies periodically in magnitude and direction. A battery does not deliver alternating current.
Source: autobatteries.com

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Current


An electrical current flowing in an electrical circuit in one direction only. A secondary battery delivers direct current and must be recharged with direct current in the opposite direction of the dis [..]
Source: autobatteries.com

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Current


One of cPanel & WHM's release tiers. Versions on this tier are tested and verified, but may not contain all of the proposed functionality of a release. For more information, read our cPanel & WHM Product Versions and the Release Process documentation.
Source: documentation.cpanel.net (offline)

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Current


The power supply usually available from the electric utility company or alternators.
Source: leeson.com (offline)

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Current


The power supply available from batteries, generators (not alternators), or a rectified source used for special applications.
Source: leeson.com (offline)

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Current


adj. actual (e.g., estado civil actual); (year) en curso; (in effect) vigente (e.g., tasa de interés vigente)
Source: trelliscompany.org

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Current


The volume or quantum of the flow of electrons through a conductor, as opposed to voltage, which is the measure of the intensity or velocity of the electrical flow.
Source: electronixwarehouse.com

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Current


Generally, a horizontal movement of water. Currents may be classified as tidal and non-tidal. Tidal currents are caused by gravitational interactions between the Sun, Moon, and Earth and are part of t [..]
Source: pursuetheoutdoors.com

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Current


a movement of electrons through a conductor. Measured in amperes.
Source: hach.com

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Current


The rate of transfer of electricity. Practical unit is the ampere which represents the transfer of one coulomb per second.  In a simple circuit, current (I) produced by a cell or electromotive force (E) when there is an external resistance (R) and internal resistance (r) is: I = E/(R+r).
Source: conductivecable.com (offline)

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Current


The flow of Ions into or out of Cells that cause Excitatory Postsynaptic Potentials.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Current


The flow of Ions into or out of Cells that cause Inhibitory Postsynaptic Potentials.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Current


The ion flow that effects the Postsynaptic Potential.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Current


The horizontal movement of water usually caused by tides or wind; as in: Compensation for the current is necessary when sailing in many coastal areas.
Source: schoolofsailing.net

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Current


The horizontal movement of water.
Source: marineinstitute.org

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Current


The horizontal movement of water.
Source: brethrencoast.com

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Current


The movement of water, due to tides, river movement and circular currents caused by the motion of the earth
Source: riggingandsails.com

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Current


the horizontal movement of water. Compare to Tide
Source: photographers1.com

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Current


Horizontal movement of the water caused by tidal change, wind, river movement, or circular currents caused by the motion of the earth.
Source: marinewaypoints.com

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Current


The movement or flow of a fluid, e.g. a tidal current, ocean current year, etc.
Source: morbihan-tourism.co.uk

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Current


Current is the flow of electrical charge carriers like electrons. Current flows from negative to positive points. The SI unit for measuring electric current is the ampere (A). One ampere of current is [..]
Source: techopedia.com

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Current


A movement or flow of electricity. Electric current is measured by the number of coulombs per second flowing past a certain point in a conductor. A coulomb is equal to about 6.25 x 1018 electrons (6,2 [..]
Source: owp.csus.edu

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Current


Sometimes refers to the swiftest part of a stream flow; otherwise refers to the velocity of the flow, measured in feet or meters/seconds (ft/s, m/s).
Source: bcn.boulder.co.us

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Current


Measured in amperes, it is the flow of electrons through a conductor. Also know as electron flow.
Source: itdoesthejob.com

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Current


This is the flow of electrons through a circuit. Moving electrons generate heat and electromagnetic waves as a by-product of this motion.
Source: co-pylit.org (offline)

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Current


1. A horizontal movement of water. Currents may be classified as tidal and nontidal. Tidal currents are caused by gravitational interactions between the sun, moon, and earth and are a part of the same [..]
Source: en.wikisource.org

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Current


A horizontal movement of water. Currents may be classified as tidal and nontidal. Tidal currents are caused by gravitational interactions between the sun, moon, and earth and are a part of the same general movement of the sea that is manifested in the vertical rise and fall, called TIDE. Tidal currents are periodic with a net velocity of zero over [..]
Source: forecast.weather.gov (offline)

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Current


The flow of electricity in a circuit as expressed in amperes.
Source: adeptpower.co.uk

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Current


Flow of electrons in an electric conductor.
Source: hi-energy.org.uk (offline)

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Current


The flow of electricity, either alternating (AC like a wall outlet) or direct (DC like a battery).
Source: ukhairdressers.com (offline)

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Current


The amount of electric charge flowing past a specified circuit point per unit time.
Source: thespacerace.com (offline)

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Current


the portion of a stream or body of water which is moving with a velocity much greater than the average of the rest of the water. The progress of the water is principally concentrated in the current. S [..]
Source: edwardsaquifer.net

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Current


Movement in a body of water caused by major ocean circulation or tides, by waves along shorelines, and by gravity-induced flow in rivers.
Source: freshwaterplatform.eu

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Current


Electrical entity which is defined by the amount of charge flow in Coulomb per second. Unit:=Ampere (A). 1 A = 1 C / 1 sec. Symbol:=I In electrical equations
Source: zytrax.com (offline)

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Current


the flow of electrical charge measured in amperes.
Source: audioholics.com

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Current


Measured in amperes, it is the flow of electrons through a conductor. Also known as electron flow.
Source: wiki.analog.com

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Current


moving charge carriers (electrons and/or holes)
Source: oes-net.de (offline)

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Current


The movement of electrons through a conductor. Current is measured in amperes.
Source: suntransformer.com (offline)

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Current


The movement or flow of electricity.
Source: northwesternenergy.com

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Current


A horizontal movement of water, such as the Gulf Stream off the east coast of North America, or air, such as the jet stream.
Source: kestrelmeters.com.au (offline)

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Current


The flow of electricity, either alternating (AC like a wall outlet) or direct (DC like a battery).
Source: intmedtourism.com

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Current


Moving water.
Source: highdesertriver.com (offline)

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Current


The flow of electric charge that transports energy from one place to another. Measured in amperes, where one ampere is the flow of 6.25 x10^18 electrons (or protons) per second.
Source: bourns.com

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Current


The maximum current a Multifuse® device can pass without interruption.
Source: bourns.com

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Current


The maximum fault current a Multifuse® device can withstand without damage at the rated voltage.
Source: bourns.com

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Current


The minimum current that will switch a device from the low resistance to the high resistance state.
Source: bourns.com

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Current


A horizontal movement of water, such as the Gulf Stream off the east coast of North America, or air, such as the jet stream.
Source: weathershack.com

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A horizontal movement of water, such as the Gulf Stream off the east coast of North America, or air, such as the jet stream. Cut-Off High - A warm high which has become displaced and is on the polarwa [..]
Source: pepperridgenorthvalley.com

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A horizontal movement of water, such as the Gulf Stream off the east coast of North America, or air, such as the jet stream.
Source: communityweather.org.nz

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Current


A horizontal movement of water
Source: image.weather.com (offline)

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Current


A horizontal movement of water, such as the Gulf Stream off the east coast of North America, or air, such as the jet stream.
Source: 40north70west.com (offline)

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Current


Water Flow produced by the movement of water
Source: discoversailing.org.au

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Current


The amount of electron charge passing a point in a conductor per unit of time.
Source: testing1212.co.uk

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Current


The movement of electrons past a reference point. The passage of electrons through a conductor. Measured in amperes.
Source: interfacebus.com

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The electric flow in an electric circuit, which is expressed in amperes (amps).
Source: massengineers.com

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[see electric current]
Source: elect.mrt.ac.lk (offline)

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Current


Currents, Current or The Current may refer to:
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Current


Currents, Current or The Current may refer to:
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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In mathematics, more particularly in functional analysis, differential topology, and geometric measure theory, a k-current in the sense of Georges de Rham is a functional on the space of compactly sup [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Current is the fifth studio album by funk-disco band Heatwave, released in 1982 on the Epic label. It was produced by Barry Blue. The album was remastered and reissued with bonus tracks in 2010 by Big [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Current is an American trade journal that covers public broadcasting in the United States. It is described by the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) as "The most widely read periodical in the field". [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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A current in a stream is the flow of water influenced by gravity as the water moves downhill to reduce its potential energy. The current varies spatially as well as temporally within the stream, depen [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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A current in a fluid is the magnitude and direction of flow within that fluid, such as a liquid or a gas. Types of fluid currents include: Air current Boundary current Current (stream), a current in [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Current


Currents, Current or The Current may refer to:
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Current is a 1992 Indian drama film. The film was co-written and directed by K. Hariharan, in his Hindi cinema debut, for the National Film Development Corporation of India. Starring Om Puri and Deept [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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GE Current (formerly: Current, powered by GE) is a company that sells energy management systems. It is headquartered in Cleveland, Ohio with additional presence in Montreal, Quebec, San Ramon, Califor [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org





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