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Definition of Electrical energy
1. Noun. Energy made available by the flow of electric charge through a conductor. "They built a car that runs on electricity"
Specialized synonyms: Ac, Alternating Current, Alternating Electric Current, Dc, Direct Current, Direct Electric Current, Signal
Generic synonyms: Energy, Free Energy
Derivative terms: Electric, Electrify, Electrify
Lexicographical Neighbors of Electrical Energy
Literary usage of Electrical energy
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Transactions of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers by American Institute of Electrical Engineers (1914)
"The distribution of electrical energy in a given area, ... Other things being
equal, any given method of distributing electrical energy should afford better ..."
2. Elements of the Comparative Anatomy of Vertebrates by Gustav Mann, Walther Löb, Henry William Frederic Lorenz, Robert Wiedersheim, William Newton Parker, Thomas Jeffery Parker, Harry Clary Jones, Sunao Tawara, Leverett White Brownell, Max Julius Louis Le Blanc, Willis Rodney Whitney, John Wesley Brown, Wi (1907)
"electrical energy may be factored into two factors, as already stated, ...
The capacity for electrical energy is the amount present in a given system, ..."
3. A Course in Electrical Engineering by Chester Laurens Dawes (1920)
"electrical energy.—Power is the rate of doing work, or is the rate of ...
Therefore electrical energy is equal to the product of electrical power and time. ..."
4. Practical Electricity by Terrell Croft (1917)
"Generation of electrical energy.—This subject is an important one. ... The Real
Meaning of the Term "Generation of electrical energy. ..."
5. Principles and Practice of Electrical Engineering by Alexander Gray (1917)
"Heat Energy and electrical energy.—The energy required to raise the temperature
of 1 Ib. of water by 1° F. is called the British Thermal Unit (BTU) and is ..."
6. Principles and Practice of Electrical Engineering by Alexander Gray (1917)
"Heat Energy and electrical energy.—The energy required to raise the temperature
of 1 Ib. of water by 1° F. is called the British Thermal Unit (BTU) and is ..."
7. Experimental Electrical Engineering and Manual for Electrical Testing for by Vladimir Karapetoff (1922)
"The Watt-Hour as a Unit of Consumption of electrical energy. — A certain amount
of coal is required to generate electrical energy at the rate of one watt ..."