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  1. Dictionary
    discharge

    verb

    • 1. tell (someone) officially that they can or must leave a place or situation.
    • 2. allow (a liquid, gas, or other substance) to flow out from where it has been confined: "industrial plants discharge highly toxic materials into rivers" Similar send outpourreleaseejectOpposite absorb

    noun

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. DISCHARGE definition: 1. to allow someone officially to leave somewhere, especially a hospital or a law court: 2. to…. Learn more.

  3. 1. : to relieve of a charge, load, or burden: a. : unload. discharge a cargo ship. b. : to release from an obligation. will be discharged from further payment. c. electrical engineering : to release electrical energy from (something, such as a battery or capacitor) by a discharge (see discharge entry 2 sense 9b)

  4. To discharge is to fire a gun or an employee, or to set someone free from a hospital or jail. You'd probably like being discharged from jail, but not from your job, unless you really hate it. As a verb, discharge is “to release,” and as a noun, it refers to the act of or setting free.

  5. Discharge definition: to relieve of a charge or load; unload. See examples of DISCHARGE used in a sentence.

  6. dis·charge. (dĭs-chärj′) v. dis·charged, dis·charg·ing, dis·charg·es. v.tr. 1. 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. 2. To remove from office or employment.

  7. noun (count) (noncount) (Chemical Engineering: General) Discharge is the flow of waste or product from a process. The control of air pollution resulting from the discharge of sulfur dioxide into the atmosphere has become increasingly urgent.

  8. discharge. verb. /dɪsˈtʃɑːdʒ/ /dɪsˈtʃɑːrdʒ/ (formal) Verb Forms. from the police/army. [transitive, usually passive] to give somebody official permission to leave the police or the armed forces; to make somebody leave the police or the armed forces. be discharged from something He was discharged from the army following his injury.

  9. Discharge is the flow of waste or product from a process. More. in the Oil and Gas Industry. When a pump discharges a substance, it pushes it out. More. in Electrical Engineering. Electrical discharge can occur by the release of the electric charge stored in a capacitor through an external circuit. More. Conjugations of 'discharge'

  10. noun. /ˈdɪstʃɑːdʒ/ /ˈdɪstʃɑːrdʒ/ (formal) of liquid/gas. [uncountable, countable] the action of releasing a substance such as a liquid or gas; a substance that comes out from inside somewhere. a ban on the discharge of toxic waste. nasal/vaginal discharge (= from the nose/ vagina) discharge from something a thick discharge from the nose.

  11. To relieve of or release from something that burdens or confines. Webster's New World. Similar definitions. To release or remove (that by which one is burdened or confined) Webster's New World. To be released or thrown off. Webster's New World. To let go; empty out. A train discharging commuters. American Heritage. Similar definitions.