No. They are designed to be used then discarded.
No, beryllium batteries are not rechargeable. They are typically primary batteries, meaning they are designed for one-time use and should not be recharged.
Primary cells are designed to be used once and discarded. Secondary cells are, by definition, rechargeable batteries, and as such are the kind used in rechargeable torches (or flashlights, for you American types).
Presumably you're talking about the battery. Lithium batteries are "primary batteries"; that is, they're not rechargeable. Lithium ion batteries are rechargeable, and are therefore a much better choice for a cell phone.
Only batteries that are marked "Rechargeable" are rechargeable. Are others are single use.
a car battery that can be recharged. All automobile batteries are rechargeable.
The most type of rechargable batteries are Duracell and Energizer. They have some good rechargeable batteries. Energizer just came out with two good new rechargeable batteries.
Yes, Ni-Cd (Nickel-Cadmium) batteries are rechargeable.
Yes, if they are of the rechargeable type
First off, a battery is what you get when you stick several cells together, so for the most common 1.5 volts the strictly correct answer is that they are cells, not batteries. The 9 volt rectangular thingies though, they are batteries. Primary vs secondary is about rechargeable or not. A primary is not rechargeable, so a Duracell would most likely be a Primary cell.
Information about a rechargeable batteries can be found online at the Amazon website and the Walmart website. The website gives you information about the prices and type of rechargeable batteries.
The primary demand for lead in 2003 resulted from growing demand for rechargeable automobile batteries
You can't "recycle" a battery but there are rechargeable batteries. Rechargeable batteries range in size anywhere from AAA to car batteries.