amerikai:
brit:
1. The amount of money levied for a service.
There will be a charge of five dollars.
2. A ground attack against a prepared enemy.
Pickett did not die leading his famous charge.
3. A forceful forward movement.
4. An accusation.
That's a slanderous charge of abuse of trust.
Szinonimák: count
5. An electric charge.
6. The scope of someone's responsibility.
The child was in the nanny's charge.
7. Someone or something entrusted to one's care, such as a child to a babysitter or a student to a teacher.
The child was a charge of the nanny.
8. A load or burden; cargo.
The ship had a charge of colonists and their belongings.
9. An instruction.
I gave him the charge to get the deal closed by the end of the month.
10. An offensive foul in which the player with the ball moves into a stationary defender.
11. A measured amount of powder and/or shot in a firearm cartridge.
12. An image displayed on an escutcheon.
13. A position (of a weapon) fitted for attack.
to bring a weapon to the charge
14. A sort of plaster or ointment.
15. Weight; import; value.
16. A measure of thirty-six pigs of lead, each pig weighing about seventy pounds; a charre.
17. An address given at a church service concluding a visitation.
1. To assign a duty or responsibility to
2. To assign (a debit) to an account
Let's charge this to marketing.
3. To pay on account, as by using a credit card
Can I charge my purchase to my credit card?
4. To require payment (of) (a price or fee, for goods, services, etc.)
I won't charge you for the wheat
5. (possibly archaic) to sell at a given price.
to charge coal at $5 per unit
6. To formally accuse (a person) of a crime.
I'm charging you with assault and battery.
7. To impute or ascribe
8. To call to account; to challenge
9. To place a burden or load on or in
10. To load equipment with material required for its use, as a firearm with powder, a fire hose with water, a chemical reactor with raw materials
Charge your weapons; we're moving up.
11. To move forward quickly and forcefully, particularly in combat and/or on horseback
12. (of a hunting dog) to lie on the belly and be still (A command given by a hunter to a dog)