Charge

Charge or charged may refer to:

  • Charge (basketball), illegal contact by pushing or moving into another player's torso
  • Charge (fanfare), a six-note trumpet or bugle piece denoting the call to rush forward
  • Charge (heraldry), any object depicted on a shield
  • Charge (pen spinning), a pen-spinning trick
  • Charge (warfare), a maneuver where soldiers rush towards the enemy to engage in close combat
  • Charge (youth), an underage person placed under the supervision of a nobleman
  • Chargé d'affaires, two classes of diplomatic agents
  • Criminal charge, a formal accusation made before a court by a prosecuting authority
  • Charge (bugle call), a bugle call which signals to execute a charge

Read more about Charge:  Mathematics, Science, and Technology, Finance, Entertainment

Other articles related to "charge, call":

Mountain Dew - Flavors and Varieties
... caffeine-free, but has been reformulated as Mountain Dew "Citrus Charge" and now contains caffeine ... this flavor would once again return to shelves to coincide with the upcoming game Call of Duty Modern Warfare 3 ... in New Zealand in 2011 under the name "Electro Shock" and described as a "charge of wild berry flavor." A Diet Voltage was released in 2011 as a part of the "FanDEWmonium ...
USS Abnaki (ATF-96) - Operational History - 1960–1969
... a course for Hong Kong on 30 April for a liberty call from 3 to 8 May ... She remained in Thailand, making one liberty call at Bangkok, until 22 September ... She anchored off Vung Tau on Navy Day 1966, transferred her charge, and then got underway on 28 October to return home via Sasebo and Yokosuka ...

Famous quotes containing the words call and/or charge:

    The right eloquence needs no bell to call the people together, and no constable to keep them.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)

    I have never doubted your courage and devotion to the cause. But you have just lost a Division, and prima facie the fault is upon you; and while that remains unchanged, for me to put you in command again, is to justly subject me to the charge of having put you there on purpose to have you lose another.
    Abraham Lincoln (1809–1865)