A form of energy that is found in nature but that can be artificially produced
What is electricity?
The complete path of an electric current.
What is a circuit?
An electrical device (as in a wall) into which an appliance may be plugged.
The effect of a strong charge of electricity passing through the body of a person or animal.
What is shock?
Force or energy that is or can be applied to work.
What is Power?
To bring into existence.
What is to generate?
A stream of electric charge.
What is a current?
A device for making, breaking, or changing the connections in an electrical circuit.
What is a switch?
An electrical connection made between points in an electric circuit between which current does not normally flow.
What is a short-circuit?
A unit of electrical potential difference and electromotive force.
What is volt?
To continue without stop.
What is continuous?
A device offering electrical resistance.
What are resistors?
Daily Double
This famous inventor is best known for his contributions to the incandescent light bulb.
Who is Thomas Edison?
To be killed by electric shock.
What is electrecuted?
A unit for measuring the rate of flow of an electric current.
Ampere
A piece of some material that is able to attract iron.
What is a magnet?
The opposition offered by a body or substance to the passage through it of a steady electric current.
What is resistance?
A machine that produces motion or power for doing work.
What is a motor?
A condition of being hot.
What is heat?
Attraction toward a particular object or in a specific direction.
What is polarity?
The portion of space near a magnetic body or a body carrying an electric current within which magnetic forces due to the body or current can be detected.
What is a magnetic field?
An electric cell or connected electric cells for providing electric current.
What is a battery?
A metal in the form of a usually flexible thread or slender rod.
What is a wire?
A material that does not conduct electrical current.
What is an insulator?
DAILY DOUBLE
The unit used in measuring the rate of energy transfer.
What is a Watt?