| 释义 | 
		noun vɒltvəʊltvoʊlt The SI unit of electromotive force, the difference of potential that would carry one ampere of current against one ohm resistance.  Example sentencesExamples -  The person doing the conversion decides what voltage the system will run at - typically anything between 96 volts and 192 volts.
 -  The car's inverter voltage was increased from 500 volts to 550 volts and the petrol engine's electronic management system was altered to allow it to rev higher.
 -  Like 220 volts of current being forced through a 110-volt kitchen appliance, the system is becoming overloaded, and the smoke is rising.
 -  As discussed previously, voltage is measured in volts, and current is measured in amps.
 -  If only amperage is listed, the formula to determine watts is: amps times volts equal watts.
 -  This a distribution power line, and the utility crews have told me that these sorts of lines normally carry 7,600 volts of electricity.
 -  Invented in 1985, modern-day magnetic stimulators charge up to a whopping 3,000 volts and produce peak currents of up to 8,000 amps - powers similar to those of a small nuclear reactor.
 -  The instrument is able to measure isotopes at the individual atom level and does so by generating millions of volts of electricity.
 -  It is defined as the energy lost or gained by an electron as it passes through a potential difference of one volt.
 -  They created electricity running at 10 volts with a milliamp current, enough to power a small lightbulb.
 -  Once it's charged, the capacitor has the same voltage as the battery (1.5 volts on the battery means 1.5 volts on the capacitor).
 -  Because powerlines are typically 400,000 volts, and Earth is at an electrical potential of zero volts, pylons create electric fields between the cables they carry and the ground.
 -  At the rear of the engine is a pair of rectangular metal grids that are charged with 6,000 volts of electric potential.
 -  The characteristic voltage is about 2 volts per cell, so by combining six cells you get a 12-volt battery.
 -  A news report said the line carried 13,000 volts of electricity.
 -  Lightening is a discharge of static electricity that ‘contains’ millions of volts of potential difference and many thousands of amps of electrical current.
 -  A 19 year old man suffered serious burns after climbing 30 feet up an electricity pylon carrying 30,000 volts.
 -  Noise signal out is generally given in amps per Hz or volts per Hz.
 -  Next door to the proposed site is a massive electrical substation with overhead power cables carrying 33,000 volts.
 -  These cables carry in the order of 13,000 volts of electricity.
 
 
 Origin   Late 19th century: named after A. Volta (see Volta, Alessandro). Rhymes   bolt, colt, dolt, holt, jolt, moult (US molt), poult, smolt nounvɒltvəʊltvoʊlt variant spelling of volte  Example sentencesExamples -  Make a complete volte or turn about on the toe of the right, bringing the left foot well behind it.
 
 
 verb vɒltvəʊltvoʊlt [no object]Fencing Make a quick movement to avoid a thrust.  Example sentencesExamples -  He strongly favours fencing along a straight line, disapproving of ‘volting ‘, crossing the legs, and all the tricks which were favoured with the ancients.’
 
 
 Origin   Late 17th century: from French volter (see volte).    nounvōltvoʊlt The SI unit of electromotive force, the difference of potential that would drive one ampere of current against one ohm resistance.  Example sentencesExamples -  Because powerlines are typically 400,000 volts, and Earth is at an electrical potential of zero volts, pylons create electric fields between the cables they carry and the ground.
 -  A news report said the line carried 13,000 volts of electricity.
 -  Next door to the proposed site is a massive electrical substation with overhead power cables carrying 33,000 volts.
 -  The car's inverter voltage was increased from 500 volts to 550 volts and the petrol engine's electronic management system was altered to allow it to rev higher.
 -  These cables carry in the order of 13,000 volts of electricity.
 -  The person doing the conversion decides what voltage the system will run at - typically anything between 96 volts and 192 volts.
 -  At the rear of the engine is a pair of rectangular metal grids that are charged with 6,000 volts of electric potential.
 -  A 19 year old man suffered serious burns after climbing 30 feet up an electricity pylon carrying 30,000 volts.
 -  Lightening is a discharge of static electricity that ‘contains’ millions of volts of potential difference and many thousands of amps of electrical current.
 -  If only amperage is listed, the formula to determine watts is: amps times volts equal watts.
 -  As discussed previously, voltage is measured in volts, and current is measured in amps.
 -  This a distribution power line, and the utility crews have told me that these sorts of lines normally carry 7,600 volts of electricity.
 -  It is defined as the energy lost or gained by an electron as it passes through a potential difference of one volt.
 -  Invented in 1985, modern-day magnetic stimulators charge up to a whopping 3,000 volts and produce peak currents of up to 8,000 amps - powers similar to those of a small nuclear reactor.
 -  The characteristic voltage is about 2 volts per cell, so by combining six cells you get a 12-volt battery.
 -  They created electricity running at 10 volts with a milliamp current, enough to power a small lightbulb.
 -  Noise signal out is generally given in amps per Hz or volts per Hz.
 -  Like 220 volts of current being forced through a 110-volt kitchen appliance, the system is becoming overloaded, and the smoke is rising.
 -  The instrument is able to measure isotopes at the individual atom level and does so by generating millions of volts of electricity.
 -  Once it's charged, the capacitor has the same voltage as the battery (1.5 volts on the battery means 1.5 volts on the capacitor).
 
 
 Origin   Late 19th century: named after A. Volta (see Volta, Alessandro). nounvōltvoʊlt A sudden quick jump or other movement to escape a thrust.  Example sentencesExamples -  Make a complete volte or turn about on the toe of the right, bringing the left foot well behind it.
 
 
 verbvōltvoʊlt [no object]Fencing Make a quick movement to avoid a thrust.  Example sentencesExamples -  He strongly favours fencing along a straight line, disapproving of ‘volting ‘, crossing the legs, and all the tricks which were favoured with the ancients.’
 
 
 Origin   Late 17th century: from French volter (see volte).     |