You searched for: “fuses
fuse (s) (noun), fuses (pl)
1. An electrical safety device that contains a piece of metal that melts if the current running through it exceeds a particular level and thereby can interrupt the flow of electrical current when it is overloaded.
2. A cord of readily combustible material that is lighted at one end to carry a flame along its length to detonate an explosive at the other end.
3. A slow-burning wick or other device used to set off a shell, bomb, a blast of gunpower, or other explosive charge.
4. Etymology: "a combustible cord" or "a tube for lighting an explosive device"; also fuze, 1640's, from Italian fuso, "spindle" (because the originals were long, thin tubes filled with gunpowder); from Latin fusus, "spindle".

Influenced by French fusée, "spindleful of hemp fiber" and from outdated English fusee, "musket fired by a fuse".

The reference to "a device that breaks an electrical circuit" was first recorded in 1884; and it was named because of its shape and it was not derived from the origin of this "Italian fuse".

This entry is located in the following unit: fus-, fun-, fund-, fut-, found- (page 4)
fuse (verb), fuses; fused; fusing
1. To join or to become joined because of heat or a chemical reaction: "The melted metals fused with each other."
2. To join or to combine different things together: "Their musical compositions are fusing a variety of classical pieces."
This entry is located in the following unit: fus-, fun-, fund-, fut-, found- (page 4)
Word Entries at Get Words: “fuses
fuse (s) (noun), fuses (pl)
Safety devices which protect circuits from receiving too much current.

The wires of the fuses melt in response to too much electric current passing through them, and so, they break the circuits.

This entry is located in the following unit: Technical Science and Engineering (page 2)