
Originally Posted by
Jeff Root
Boy, is that ever a pointless distinction. A flow of charged
particles is called "electricity" if in wires and circuits, but
not elsewhere.
The dictionary I have relied on for the last 40 years, Webster's
New World Dictionary of the American Language, College Edition
(1964), says:
electricity n. 1. a form of energy generated by friction,
induction, or chemical change, and having magnetic, chemical,
and radiant effects: it is a property of the basic particles
of all matter, consisting of protons (positive charges) and
electrons (negative charges), which attract each other.
2. a) an electric current; stream of moving electrons: it sets
up a magnetic field of force through which it produces kinetic
energy. b) static electricity; charge of stationary particles:
it sets up a field of force having potential energy. 3. The
branch of physics dealing with electricity. 4. electric current
suplied as a public utility for lighting, heating, etc.
The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language,
Third Edition (1992) which is part of Microsoft Bookshelf:
electricity noun
1. a. The physical phenomena arising from the behavior of electrons
and protons that is caused by the attraction of particles with
opposite charges and the repulsion of particles with the same
charge. b. The physical science of such phenomena.
2. Electric current used or regarded as a source of power.
My Radio Shack Dictionary of Electronics (1975) Doesn't have a
good 'definition' per se, but the entry says in part:
electricity-- The property of certain particles to posess a
force field.... Electricity can be further classified as static
electricity or dynamic electricity. Static electricity in its
strictest sense refers to charges at rest, as opposed to dynamic
electricity, or charges in motion. Static electricity is
sometimes used as a synonym for triboelectricity or frictional
electricity.
My high school physics textbook was "Physics - Second Edition"
by the Physical Science Study Committee, Educational Services,
Inc., published by D.C. Heath and Company (1965). The book is
divided into four major parts. Part IV is titled 'Electricity
and Atomic Structure'. While it is true that a large fraction
of that section of the book is about electric circuits, including
a chapter titled 'Electric circuits', it is all about electricity
as a physical phenomenon of nature.
-- Jeff, in Minneapolis