0 present participle of charge --
1 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.
2 (of the police) to make a formal statement saying that someone is accused of a crime: --
3 to move forward quickly and violently, especially towards something that has caused difficulty or anger: --
4 to put enough explosive into a gun to fire it once --
5 to order someone to do something: --
Hence, we suggest considering pro-rate charging of electricity.
It is a small step made by most economists to immediately recommend a policy of charging the rental rate for harvesting each species.
Under the current regulatory overlay, investment advisers also owe fiduciary duties to fund shareholders, including a duty to refrain from charging unreasonable fee levels.
The saturation is provided by an interplay between dust particle trapping and dust charging.
The upper bound is based on a new charging scheme which assigns each tetrahedron of minimum volume to one of its four faces.
These structures ringed the city, charging tolls on entering traffic.
In order to develop methods by which to remove such contaminants from the system, a proper under standing of grain charging becomes essential.
The local authority took the same view initially, unilaterally designing a means-tested charging system which was 'a hybrid between residential care and domiciliary care'.