capacitor

noun
/kəˈpæ.sɪ.tə/UK/kəˈpæ.sə.tɚ/US

Etymology

From capacity + -or. Capacitor replaced the term condenser (coined by Alessandro Volta in 1782) to disambiguate it from steam condenser. The coiner is unknown but the change was recommended in 1926 by British Standard Glossary of Terms in Electrical Engineering.

  1. derived from capācitās
  2. derived from capacite
  3. inherited from capacite
  4. formed as capacitor — “capacity + -or

Definitions

  1. An electronic component capable of storing electrical energy in an electric field

    An electronic component capable of storing electrical energy in an electric field; especially one consisting of two conductors separated by a dielectric.

    • By placing the 0.02μF capacitor on top of the whistle chip, the circuit oscillates at a lower frequency. […] It is possible to pick resistors and capacitors that will make the pitch higher than humans can hear.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for capacitor. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA