Nearby Words

Charged

[chahrjd] Origin

charged

[chahrjd]
adjective
1.
intense; impassioned: an emotionally charged speech.
2.
fraught with emotion: the charged atmosphere of the room.
3.
capable of producing violent emotion, arousing controversy, etc.: the highly charged issue of birth control.
4.
Electricity. pertaining to a particle, body, or system possessing a net amount of positive or negative electric charge.

Origin:
1275–1325; Middle English, for sense “laden, filled”; 1785–95 for def. 1; see charge, -ed2

well-charged, adjective

:10

:09

:08

:07

:06

:05

:04

:03

:02

:01

Charged is always a great word to know.
So is ort. Does it mean:
a stew of meat, vegetables, potatoes, etc.
a scrap or morsel of food left at a meal.
Dictionary.com Unabridged

charge

[chahrj] verb, charged, charg·ing, noun
verb (used with object)
1.
to impose or ask as a price or fee: That store charges $25 for leather gloves.
2.
to impose on or ask of (someone) a price or fee: He didn't charge me for it.
3.
to defer payment for (a purchase) until a bill is rendered by the creditor: The store let me charge the coat.
4.
to hold liable for payment; enter a debit against.
5.
to attack by rushing violently against: The cavalry charged the enemy.
EXPAND
6.
to accuse formally or explicitly (usually followed by with): They charged him with theft.
7.
to impute; ascribe the responsibility for: He charged the accident to his own carelessness.
8.
to instruct authoritatively, as a judge does a jury.
9.
to lay a command or injunction upon: He charged his secretary with the management of his correspondence.
10.
to fill or furnish (a thing) with the quantity, as of powder or fuel, that it is fitted to receive: to charge a musket.
11.
to supply with a quantity of electric charge or electrical energy: to charge a storage battery.
12.
to change the net amount of positive or negative electric charge of (a particle, body, or system).
13.
to suffuse, as with emotion: The air was charged with excitement.
14.
to fill (air, water, etc.) with other matter in a state of diffusion or solution: The air was charged with pollen.
15.
Metallurgy. to load (materials) into a furnace, converter, etc.
16.
to load or burden (the mind, heart, etc.): His mind was charged with weighty matters.
17.
to put a load or burden on or in.
18.
to record the loan of, as books or other materials from a library (often followed by out): The librarian will charge those books at the front desk.
19.
to borrow, as books or other materials from a library (often followed by out): How many magazines may I charge at one time?
20.
Heraldry. to place charges on (an escutcheon).
COLLAPSE
verb (used without object)
21.
to make an onset; rush, as to an attack.
22.
to place the price of a thing to one's debit.
23.
to require payment: to charge for a service.
24.
to make a debit, as in an account.
25.
(of dogs) to lie down at command.
noun
26.
expense or cost: improvements made at a tenant's own charge.
27.
a fee or price charged: a charge of three dollars for admission.
28.
a pecuniary burden, encumbrance, tax, or lien; cost; expense; liability to pay: After his death there were many charges on his estate.
29.
an entry in an account of something due.
30.
an impetuous onset or attack, as of soldiers.
EXPAND
31.
a signal by bugle, drum, etc., for a military charge.
32.
a duty or responsibility laid upon or entrusted to one.
33.
care, custody, or superintendence: The child was placed in her nurse's charge.
34.
anything or anybody committed to one's care or management: The nurse was careful to let no harm come to her charge.
35.
Ecclesiastical. a parish or congregation committed to the spiritual care of a pastor.
36.
a command or injunction; exhortation.
37.
an accusation: He was arrested on a charge of theft.
38.
Law. an address by a judge to a jury at the close of a trial, instructing it as to the legal points, the weight of evidence, etc., affecting the verdict in the case.
39.
the quantity of anything that an apparatus is fitted to hold, or holds, at one time: a charge of coal for a furnace.
40.
a quantity of explosive to be set off at one time.
41.
Electricity.
b.
the process of charging a storage battery.
42.
Slang. a thrill; kick.
43.
Rocketry. grains of a solid propellant, usually including an inhibitor.
44.
a load or burden.
45.
Heraldry. any distinctive mark upon an escutcheon, as an ordinary or device, not considered as belonging to the field; bearing.
COLLAPSE
46.
charge off,
a.
to write off as an expense or loss.
b.
to attribute to: I charged off the blunder to inexperience.
47.
charge up, Informal.
a.
to agitate, stimulate, or excite: a fiery speaker who can charge up an audience.
b.
to put or be under the influence of narcotic drugs.
48.
in charge,
a.
in command; having supervisory power.
b.
British. under arrest; in or into the custody of the police.
49.
in charge of,
a.
having the care or supervision of: She is in charge of two libraries.
b.
Also, in the charge of. under the care or supervision of: The books are in the charge of the accounting office.

Origin:
1175–1225; 1950–55 for def. 39; (v.) Middle English chargen < Anglo-French, Old French charg(i)er < Late Latin carricāre to load a wagon, equivalent to carr(us) wagon (see car1) + -icā- v. suffix. + -re infinitive ending; (noun) Middle English < Anglo-French, Old French, noun derivative of the v.

charge·less, adjective
self-charg·ing, adjective

accuse, allege, charge.


5. assault. 6. indict, arraign, impeach. 9. enjoin, exhort, urge, bid, require, order. 27. See price. 30. onslaught, assault. 32. commission, trust. 33. management. 37. indictment, imputation, allegation. 44. cargo, freight.


6. acquit, absolve.

Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2012.
Cite This Source Link To Charged
Etymonline
Word Origin & History

charge
early 13c., from O.Fr. chargier "load, burden," from L.L. carricare "to load a wagon, cart," from L. carrus "wagon" (see car). Meaning "responsibility, burden" is mid-14c. (cf. take charge, late 14c.; in charge, 1510s), which progressed to "pecuniary burden, cost" (mid-15c.),
EXPAND
and then to "price demanded for service or goods" (1510s). Legal sense of "accusation" is late 15c.; earlier "injunction, order" (late 14c.). Sense of "rush in to attack" is 1560s, perhaps through earlier meaning of "load a weapon" (1540s). Electrical sense is from 1767. Slang meaning "thrill, kick" (Amer.Eng.) is from 1951. Chargé d'affairs was borrowed from French, 1767.
COLLAPSE
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2010 Douglas Harper
Cite This Source
American Heritage
Science Dictionary
charge   (chärj)  Pronunciation Key 
  1. A fundamental property of the elementary particles of which matter is made that gives rise to attractive and repulsive forces. There are two kinds of charge: color charge and electric charge. See more at color charge, electric charge.

  2. The amount of electric charge contained in an object, particle, or region of space.


The American Heritage® Science Dictionary
Copyright © 2002. Published by Houghton Mifflin. All rights reserved.
Cite This Source
Slang Dictionary

charge definition


  1. n.
    a dose or portion of a drug. (Drugs.) : Just a little charge till I can get to my candy man.
  2. n.
    a drug's rush. (Drugs.) : What kind of charge do you expect out of half-cashed weed?
  3. n.
    a thrill. : I got a tremendous charge out of your last letter.
Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions by Richard A. Spears.Fourth Edition.
Copyright 2007. Published by McGraw Hill.
Cite This Source

charged (up) definition


  1. mod.
    slightly overdosed with drugs. (Drugs.) : He was talking fast and nodding his head back and forth. I think he was charged.
  2. mod.
    drug intoxicated. (Drugs.) : Paul was one charged up guy after the session.
  3. mod.
    excited. : The audience was charged up and ready for the star to come out.
Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions by Richard A. Spears.Fourth Edition.
Copyright 2007. Published by McGraw Hill.
Cite This Source
Dictionary.com, LLC. Copyright © 2012. All rights reserved.
  • Please Login or Sign Up to use the Recent Searches feature