0 to ask an amount of money for something, especially a service or activity: --
[ + two objects ] They charge you $20 just to get in the nightclub.
The bank charged commission to change my traveller's cheques.
1 (of the police) to make a formal statement saying that someone is accused of a crime: --
2 to move forward quickly and violently, especially towards something that has caused difficulty or anger: --
3 to put enough explosive into a gun to fire it once --
4 to order someone to do something: --
5 to put electricity into an electrical device such as a battery: --
He was probably also in charge of the production of performing parts for these operas.
This does not, in the case of charged particles, require any collision to take place.
The motion of charged particles across the field tends to be reduced, and changed in direction.
This has created an institutional vacuum where no equivalent rural institutions have emerged to take charge of the functions undertaken by the communidades.
This shows that willingness to do everything possible to help the embryo survive is not sufficient to exculpate the agents from the charge of instrumentalization.
Accounts of taking charge and assertions of robust identities tended to dominate the early interviews.
Municipalities in charge of organizing services (thereby determining the need for staff) have no say in higher education policy.
These things would then not be a charge on the actual flats.