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Loada) To place a round of ammunition in a firearm chamber or magazine. b) A specific type or composition of ammunition.
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Load An end-use device or customer that receives power from the electric system. Source: Glossary of Terms Used in NERC Reliability Standards.
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LoadLoad denotes either a fund’s maximum initial or deferred sales charge.
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LoadPounds (number) of cattle that can be hauled on a large cattle truck. For example, pot load is 42,000-52,000 lb (40-42 head of slaughter steers, 72 yearlings, or 100 calves).
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LoadOf a stream, the amount that it carries at any one time.
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Loadlate 15c., "to place in or on (a vehicle)," from load (n.). Sense of "add to the weight of, put a load in or on" is from c. 1500; sense of "to charge a firearm" is from 1 [..]
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Loadc. 1200, lode, lade "that which is laid upon a person or beast, burden," a sense extension from Old English lad "a way, a course, a carrying; a street, watercourse; maintenance, support [..]
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LoadAny force or combination of forces applied to the outside of a structure.
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LoadThe portion of the offering price of shares of open-end investment companies in excess of the value of the underlying assets. Covers sales commissions and all other costs of distribution. The load is [..]
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LoadA huge overdue amount of cum that weighs down your balls and makes them ache blue
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Load1. semen 2. cum 3. love juice 4. jizz 5. a slut's toothpaste
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Loadjizz
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Loadn. the total amount of sperm ejaculated in one orgasm.
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LoadJizz, ejaculate, cum
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LoadA portion of man juice.
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LoadThe amount of semen expelled during one male ejaculation.
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LoadTo place explosives in a drill hole. Also, to transfer broken material into a haulage device.
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LoadThe amount of electric power delivered or required at any specific point or points on an electrical system. The requirement originates at the energy-consuming equipment of the customer.
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LoadThe amount of electricity delivered or required at any specific point or points on a system. The load of an electricity system is effected by many factors and changes on a daily, seasonal, and annual [..]
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Loadcomponent within a circuit that transforms electricity into a different form of energy such as light, heat, or sound.
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LoadIf you buy a mutual fund through a broker or other financial professional, you pay a sales charge or commission, also called a load. If the charge is levied when you purchase the shares, it's called a front-end load. If you pay when you sell shares, it's called a back-end load or contingent deferred sales charge. And with a level lo [..]
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LoadA sales charge or commission paid by an investor. Typically, this term is used only in connection with investments in mutual funds and municipal fund securities. See: BACK-END LOAD; COMMISSION; FRONT- [..]
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Loadweight to be borne or conveyed fill or place a load on; "load a car"; "load the truck with hay" a quantity that can be processed or transported at o [..]
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Loadv. To transfer a program held on some external storage medium (such as magnetic tape or disk) into the main memory of the machine in a form suitable for execution.
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Loadall that can be carried at one time, like a load of bricks or a load of bananas, the same word also means to put bullets into a gun, ready for shooting
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LoadThe power consumed by a device or circuit in performing its function. 2. A power-consuming device connected to a circuit. 3. To enter data or programs into storage or working registers. 4. To insert data values into a database that previously contained no occurrences of data. 5. To place a magnetic tape reel on a tape drive, or to place cards into [..]
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Loadrock material being transported by an agent of erosion.
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LoadThe amount of force which can be exerted by a lever from a given amount of effort.
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LoadDictionary of Internet Terms On the WWW,HTML documents and graphics are loaded into the browser whenever an URL is accessed.
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LoadA load in electrical terms is the power consumed by a device or a circuit. Load is also used to describe the total of all electricity consumers in a power system.
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LoadThe amount that investors pay when they buy (front-end load) or redeem (back-end load) shares in a mutual fund, similar to a commission. The SEC's rules do not limit sales loads a fund may charge,...
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LoadDefinition A sales charge added to the purchase and/or sale price of some mutual funds and annuities. opposite of no-load.
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LoadThe amount of electric power delivered or required at any specific point or points on an electrical system. The requirement originates at the energy-consuming equipment of the customer.
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Load(1) To install. For example, to load a disk means to mount it in a disk drive. (2) To copy a program from a storage device into memory. Every program must be loaded into memory before it can be execut [..]
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Load1. The combination of components used to assemble a cartridge or shotshell.2. The act of putting ammunition into a firearm.
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LoadTo dream that you carry a load, signifies a long existence filled with labors of love and charity. To fall under a load, denotes your inability to attain comforts that are necessary to those looking to you for subsistence. To see others thus engaged, denotes trials for them in which you will be interested.
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LoadNoun. The quantity of semen that is usually ejaculated. E.g."She was so horny I shot my load just looking at her." See 'shoot one's load'.
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Loadan amount added (as to the price of a security or the net premium in insurance) to represent selling expense and profit to the distributor compare no-load
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LoadIn electrical terms, the demand of an electrical process - i.e.- amp load. In computer terms it refers to transferring data from a disk (or other types of media) to a computer system.
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LoadThe amount of electrical power required by connected electrical equipment.
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LoadThe quantity or mass of any substance transported in an effluent per unit time (the product of concentration of pollutant and effluent flow).
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LoadCapacity rating in pounds which an elevator is designed to safely handle.
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LoadSee
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LoadThe amount of electric power drawn at a specific time from an electric power system, or the total power drawn from the system.
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Loadin manufacturing, describes the amount of production scheduled against a plant or machine. In warehousing, describes the materials being handled by a piece of equipment. In transportation, describes t [..]
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LoadAn amount of end-use demand.
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LoadAnything in an electrical circuit that, when the circuit is turned on, draws power from that circuit.
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LoadThe weight or force applied to the load cell.
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LoadLoad is that the amount of electric power used by devices associated to electricity generating system.
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LoadThe amount of power carried by a utility system or subsystem, or the amount of power consumed by an electric device, at a specified time. Load is also referred to as demand.
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LoadAny measurable force exerted on a structure or object. Things that can add load to a sign and its supporting structure include water, snow and wind. (See also dead load.)
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LoadWhat the river carries along with it - mud, sand, rocks, wood
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LoadThe load is any material transported by the river, e.g. Sand, pebbles, rock particles.
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LoadAny device to which power is delivered
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LoadA term used to describe work require form a motor to drive equipment attached at the shaft. Usually defined in units of horsepower, or torque at a certain speed.
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Loadmaterials carried by a stream. local wind -
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LoadThe type of load is important when it comes to selecting and calculating the suitable vibration isolation. This load is composed of two parts: 1. static load caused by the weight of the machine and th [..]
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LoadSales charge on a mutual fund, usually paid at time of purchase. The NASD
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Loadthe force to be overcome by a machine when it shifts or raises an object
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LoadShort for download and upload. If someone asks how long did the page take to load? He/She is referring to the time it takes a page to appear on your screen. If a web page is loading slow it means that [..]
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LoadThere are two popular meanings for load. The first means to fetch some data or a program from a disk and store it in memory. The second indicates the amount of work a component (especially a processor [..]
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LoadLoad refers to the process of drawing the image of a web page, including text and graphics, on your screen. If you have to wait a long time for a page to appear, you say it takes a long time to load. [..]
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LoadThe sales charge assessed upon the initial investment in or redemption of a mutual fund.
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LoadSomething physical or electrical that absorbs energy. A wind generator that is connected to a battery bank is loaded. A disconnected wind generator is NOT loaded, so the blades are free to spin at ver [..]
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Load - 1) The amount of electrical power required by connected electrical equipment. 2) The total impedance of all the items in the output circuit.
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LoadThe electrical device or devices that use electric power.
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Loadsomething which takes electrical energy from a circuit. It is sometimes called an energy sink. A household light globe becomes a load when it is connected to the mains and switched on.
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LoadThe end-use consumption of power
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LoadAn electrical device or devices that use electric power.
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LoadThe amount of electric power delivered or required at any specific point or points on a system. The requirement originates at the energy consuming equipment of the consumers.
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LoadThe amount of electricity used by any electrical unit or appliance at any given time.
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LoadThe amount of electric power required to meet customers’ use in a given period.
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LoadThe load of a transformer is the power, in kVA or volt-amperes, supplied by the transformer.
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LoadThe amount of electric power drawn at a specific time from an electric system, or the total power drawn from the system. Peak load is the amount of power drawn at the time of highest demand.
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Loadsee demand.
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Load The amount of electric power delivered or required at any specific point or points on a system. The requirement originates at the energy-consuming equipment of the consumers.
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Load End user of retail power; the consuming customer.
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LoadAmount of electricity needed/demanded at a given time.
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LoadThe amount of electric power consumed at a given point on a system.
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Loadan electrical device, or the amount of power required by such a device.
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LoadAny power consuming device connected to an electrical circuit.
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LoadAny device that consumes electricity in order to operate. Appliances, tools, and lights are examples of electrical loads.
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LoadThe electrical equipment powered from a device.
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LoadThe driven device that uses the power supplied from the source.
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LoadThe amount of electric power used by any electrical unit or appliance at any given time.
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LoadAll the devices that consume electricity and make up the total demand for power at any given moment, like factories, distribution substations, etc.
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87 |
LoadThe amount of power drawn from a utility system at a given point in time. The peak load is the highest amount of power drawn down at any one time, or the utilities maximum capacity or demand.
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88 |
LoadThe amount of electric power delivered or required at any specified point on a system. Load originates at the power-consuming equipment of the customers.
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89 |
LoadThe amount of electric power required to meet customers' use in a given time period.
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90 |
LoadThe amount of electric power delivered or required at any specific point or points on a system. The requirement originates at the energy-consuming equipment of the consumers.
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91 |
Load(1)A device, or resistance of a device, to which power is delivered in a circuit. (2) The measure of electrical demand placed on an electric system at any given time. See demand.
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92 |
LoadAny device that consumes electricity to operate. Appliances, tools, and lights are examples of electrical loads.
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93 |
Loadsarcina, onus
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LoadAn external force or other action acting on a member or structure. It can be from permanent construction, environmental effects, differential settlement, occupants, and material objects.
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LoadWeight or mass that is supported or carried and sometimes even measured. When we speak of work load, we generally mean the amount of work an individual’s job comprises.
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LoadSee ‘Equivalent full-time student load’.
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LoadThe maximum load for which a hoist is designated by the manufacturer or a qualified person.
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98 |
LoadThe total lifted weight on the load block or hook.
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LoadThe amount of electric power supplied to meet one or more end user's needs. (SOURCE: California Energy Commission, http://www.consumerenergycenter.org)
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LoadThe electric power used by devices connected to an electrical generating system. The amount of electric power required to meet customers' use in a given time period. The amount of electric power [..]
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101 |
Loada device which consumes electrical power and is connected to a source of electricity.
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Load A device or apparatus that uses the energy of a circuit to perform work. May also refer to the power used by a device, machine, or a combination of many.
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LoadThe Active, Reactive or Apparent Power, as the context requires, generated, transmitted or distributed LV (low voltage) An a.c. voltage below 1000 V between phases, or below 600 V between any phase and Earth, or a d.c. voltage below 1500 V between conductors, or below 900 V between any conductor and earth.
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LoadLoad for which voltage form and current form are similar. Voltage and current are related by Ohm's law: U(t) = Z x I(t).
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LoadLoad (generally with a switched-mode power supply) generating major harmonic currents. Current waveform is different from voltage waveform. Ohm's law is not applicable. It can be used only with each harmonic.
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106 |
LoadThe weight or force applied to the load cell.
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107 |
LoadThe overall force to which a structure is subjected in supporting a weight or mass, or in resisting externally applied forces.
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108 |
Loadis the electrical power encountered by a contact set in any particular application.
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109 |
LoadThe amount of power or watts on a circuit or distribution panel.
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110 |
LoadThe load of a transformer is the power, in kVA or volt-amperes, supplied by the transformer. (Lagging Load) inductive type load. (Leading Load) capacitive load.
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111 |
Load
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112 |
LoadThe demand on an energy producing system. The energy consumption or requirement of a piece of equipment.
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113 |
LoadA weight that needs to be lifted, moved or supported.
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114 |
Loadmeans an end-use device or customer that receives power from the electricity system. Load should not be confused with demand, which is the measure of power that a load receives or requires. Load-frequ [..]
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115 |
LoadAn external force or other action acting on a member or structure. It can be from permanent construction, environmental effects, differential settlement, occupants, and material objects.
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LoadA dose of drugs.
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117 |
Loadthe weight supported by a structure or part.
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118 |
Loadthe rate of output required; also the weight carried.
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119 |
LoadThe MW/MWh consumed by a utility/ installation.
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120 |
LoadLoad refers to the total superimposed weight on the load block or hook.
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121 |
LoadThe load of a transformer is the power, in kVA or volt-amperes, supplied by the transformer. (Lagging Load) inductive type load. (Leading Load) capacitive load.
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122 |
LoadThe amount of electrical power required by a consumer.
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123 |
LoadThe amount of power drawn from an electric system at a specific time, or the total power drawn from the system. Peak load is the amount of power drawn at the time of highest demand. Also, anything that uses electrical energy.
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124 |
LoadThe amount of electricity, in kVA or volt-amperes, supplied by the transformer. Loads are expressed as a function of the current flowing in the transformer, and not according to the watts consumed by [..]
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125 |
LoadThe power required of an energy generation system for a particular area at a specific time.
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126 |
LoadA device or the resistance of a device to which electricity is delivered.
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127 |
LoadThe load is the capacity and/or amount of electricity currently being used by all consumers using the energy grid. The load is measured in watts.
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128 |
LoadThe demand on an energy producing system; the energy consumption or requirement of a piece or group of equipment.
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129 |
LoadAmount of electricity needed at a given time.
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130 |
LoadLoad is the overall usage or consumption of electricity on a power supply. Load is generally expressed in kilowatt-hours or megawatt-hours.
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LoadA force that a body or structure is subjected to. Loads may be as a result of weight such as snow on a roof, pressure such as in a boiler drum, impact such as the force on a piston during the power stroke.
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Load Usually used with up-load or down-load, it means to transfer files or software from one computer or server to another computer or server. In other words, it is the movement of information online.
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LoadThe quantity of sediment transported by a current. It includes the suspended load of small particles in the water, and the bedload of large particles that move along the bottom.
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LoadThe amount of adaptive Work involved in Allostasis.
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135 |
LoadMeasurable quantity of Bacteria in an object, organism, or organism compartment.
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136 |
LoadThe relative amount by which the average fitness of a Population is lowered, due to the presence of Genes that decrease Survival, compared to the Genotype with maximum or optimal fitness. (From Rieger [..]
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137 |
LoadMeasure of the number of the Parasites present in a host organism.
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138 |
LoadThe total amount (Cell Number, weight, size or volume) of Tumor Cells or Tissue in the body.
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139 |
LoadThe quantity of measurable Virus in a Body Fluid. Change in viral load, measured in Plasma, is sometimes used as a SURROGATE MARKER in Disease Progression.
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140 |
LoadTo put cargo into a vessel. 2. 'Load' of timber is a measurement of 50 cu. ft. of undressed wood, 40 cu. ft. of dressed wood.
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LoadA fee paid for the purchase of a fund. A fund may be front-end (paid on purchase), back-end (paid on sale), no-load (no fee), or decreasing (fee lowers each year).
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LoadThe commission fee (also known as sales charge) paid by an investor who buys shares in a mutual fund or insurance policy. A front-end load is imposed when an investor first purchases shares in the fund as well as any subsequent shares. A back-end load is charged when an investor takes money out of the fund, although this charge usually diminishes t [..]
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LoadLoad refers to a sales charge imposed by some mutual funds*.
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144 |
LoadRefers to the amount of force placed on the objective piece from either percussion or pressure. Load is generally increased when going from pressure flaking to percussion flaking and from soft hammer [..]
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145 |
LoadThe amount of a type of pollution that the Bay and its tributaries receive.
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146 |
LoadAmount of energy of power re required from a system.
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147 |
LoadA sales charge applied to a mutual fund when buying the fund or selling shares. This sales charge is added to the price of the fund. The fee may be either a one-time charge or a yearly fee.
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Loada fee charged to investors in an investment fund, notably in order to pay commissions to distributors, and which may be paid when they buy fund shares or units, during the period of investment in the [..]
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LoadTo position the blockers so that the most effective blockerconfronts the opponents most effective attacker.
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150 |
LoadRequired rate of heat removal
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151 |
Load1. A force or combination of forces carried by a structural component. 2. The power delivered to an electrical device or equipment.
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152 |
LoadSales charge or commission paid by an investor in a load mutual fund. Loads can be charged when shares are purchased (front-end loads), when shares are sold (back-end loads) or at regular intervals over time (level loads). Funds that do not levy a sales charge and have 12b-1 fees of 0.25% or less are called no-load mutual funds.
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153 |
LoadThe electrical device that uses power supplied by the source.
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154 |
LoadThe amount of electric power delivered or required at any specified point or points on a system. Load originates primarily at the power consuming equipment of the customer.
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155 |
LoadAn external force. The term load is sometimes used to describe more general actions such as temperature differentials or movements such as foundation settlements.
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156 |
LoadCommissions charged on the purchase or sale of mutual fund units.
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157 |
LoadThe transfer of material, dissolved or particulate, associated with a flow of water.
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158 |
LoadThe electrical demand of a process expressed as power (watts), current (amps) or resistance(ohms).
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159 |
LoadThe amount of energy in MWh delivered at any specified point or points on a system.
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160 |
LoadA source drives a load. Whatever component or piece of equipment is connected to a source and draws current from a source is a load on that source.
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161 |
Loadnumber of passengers on board.
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162 |
LoadThe electric power used by devices connected to an electrical generating system. The amount of electric power required to meet customers' use in a given time period.
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163 |
LoadThe power consumed by a device or circuit in performing its function. 2. A power-consuming device connected to a circuit. 3. To enter data or programs into storage or working registers. 4. To insert data values into a database that previously contained no occurrences of data.
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164 |
LoadThe force the testing system exerts on the specimen. Load is a real channel. The testing system uses a load cell to measure force.
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165 |
Loada sales commission paid when you buy (front-end) or sell (back-end) a mutual fund.
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166 |
LoadCommission and fees taken out of investment capital; that is, the situation in which a front-loaded mutual fund takes commission and fees out of investment capital before the money is put to work.
|
167 |
LoadThe sales commission attached to a purchased or sold mutual fund.
|
168 |
Load1) The opposition to the audio output signal of a device by the input of the device being fed. 2) A resistor that would have the lowest impedance the device was designed to feed into used during testi [..]
|
169 |
LoadA device through which an electric current flows and which changes electrical energy into another form. Power consumed by a device or circuit in performing its function. A digital load my be represent [..]
|
170 |
LoadThe amount of heat per unit time imposed on a refrigeration system or the required rate of heat removal.
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171 |
LoadAny passive electrical device connected to a power source may be called by the general term of "load". It is the amount of electric power delivered or required at any specific point or points on a system. The requirement originates at the energy consuming equipment of the consumers. [Unit: kW or MW]
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172 |
LoadAn outside force that affects the structure or its members.
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173 |
Loadlang=en
1600s=1678
* '''1678''' — . ''''.
*: Now I saw in my dream, that the highway up which Christian was to go, was fenced on either side with a wall, and that wall was called Salvation. [Isa. [..]
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174 |
LoadSemen. The porn star Nick Manning became famous for saying his catch phrase, "Dropping fucking loads," while delivering the money shot.
|
175 |
LoadThe sales fee charged to an investor when shares are purchased in a load fund or annuity. See: Back-end load; front-end load; level load.
|
176 |
LoadIn UNIX computing, the system load is a measure of the amount of computational work that a computer system performs. The load average represents the average system load over a period of time. It co [..]
|
177 |
LoadLoad is the sixth studio album by the American heavy metal band Metallica, released on June 4, 1996 by Elektra Records in the United States and by Vertigo Records internationally. The album showed mor [..]
|
178 |
LoadLoad or LOAD may refer to:
|
179 |
LoadLoad or LOAD may refer to:
|
180 |
LoadLoad or LOAD may refer to:
|
181 |
LoadIn UNIX computing, the system load is a measure of the amount of computational work that a computer system performs. The load average represents the average system load over a period of time. It co [..]
|
182 |
LoadThe load (Latin: carrus, lit. "cartload"), also known as a fodder, fother, and charrus, was an English unit of weight or mass of various amounts, depending on the era and the substance being measured.
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