discharge
discharge
(dĭs-chärjʹ) verb
Abbr. dis.
verb
, transitive
1.
a. To relieve of a burden or of contents; unload. b. To unload or empty (contents).
2. a. To release, as from confinement, care, or duty: discharge a patient; discharge a soldier. b. To let go; empty out: a train discharging commuters. c. To pour forth; emit: a vent discharging steam. d. To shoot: discharge a pistol.
3. To remove from office or employment. See synonyms at dismiss.
4. To perform the obligations or demands of (an office, duty, or task). See synonyms at perform.
5. To comply with the terms of (a debt or promise, for example).
6. Law. a. To acquit completely: discharged the defendant. b. To set aside; annul: discharge a court order.
7. To remove (color) from cloth, as by chemical bleaching.
8. Electricity. To cause the release of stored energy or electric charge from (a battery, for example).
9. Architecture. a. To apportion (weight) evenly, as over a door. b. To relieve (a part) of excess weight by distribution of pressure.
verb
, intransitive
Abbr. dis.
1.
To get rid of a burden, load, or weight.
2.
a. To go off; fire: The musket discharged loudly. b. To pour forth, emit, or release contents. c. To become blurred, as a color or dye; run.
3. To undergo the release of stored energy or electric charge.
noun
(dĭsʹchärj, dĭs-chärjʹ)
Abbr. dis.
1.
The act of removing a load or burden.
2.
The act of shooting or firing a projectile or weapon.
3.
a. A flowing out or pouring forth; emission; secretion: a discharge of pus. b. The amount or rate of emission or ejection. c. Something that is discharged, released, emitted, or excreted: a watery discharge.
4. The act or an instance of removing an obligation, a burden, or a responsibility.
5. a. Fulfillment of the terms of something, such as a debt or promise. b. Performance, as of an office or a duty.
6. a. Dismissal or release from employment, service, care, or confinement. b. An official document certifying such release, especially from military service.
7. Law. An annulment or acquittal; dismissal, as of a court order.
8. Electricity. a. Release of stored energy in a capacitor by the flow of current between its terminals. b. Conversion of chemical energy to electric energy in a storage battery. c. A flow of electricity in a dielectric, especially in a rarefied gas. d. Elimination of net electric charge from a charged body.
[Middle English dischargen, from Old French deschargier, from Late Latin discarricāre : Latin dis-, dis- + Late Latin carricāre, to load. See
charge.]
discharge
ʹable adjective
dischargee
ʹ noun
discharg
ʹer noun