Yahoo Malaysia Web Search

Search results

  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. Learn the meaning of discharge as a verb and a noun in different contexts, such as allowing someone to leave, sending out a substance, performing a duty, or firing a gun. See synonyms, related words, and usage examples from the Cambridge Dictionary.

  3. Learn the various meanings and uses of the word discharge as a verb and a noun, with synonyms, examples, and word history. Find out how discharge can refer to releasing, firing, dismissing, or emitting something.

  4. Discharge can mean to release, remove, or unload something or someone, or to perform or fulfill a duty or obligation. It can also refer to a fluid, emission, or electric current. See different meanings and usage of discharge in various contexts.

  5. 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.

  6. [transitive, often passive] to allow somebody to leave hospital because they are well enough to leave. be discharged (from something) Patients were being discharged from the hospital too early. All the people involved in the accident have now been discharged from hospital.

  7. Learn the meaning and usage of the word 'discharge' as a verb and a noun in different contexts. Find synonyms, pronunciation, grammar, and examples of 'discharge' in British and American English.

  8. Learn the meaning, pronunciation and examples of discharge as a noun in different contexts, such as liquid, gas, electricity, police, army, hospital, prison, court and gun. Find out how to use discharge in sentences and collocations with the Oxford app.