Yes. Circuits in a home are 120 volts but people tend to call them 110 volt circuits. The 120 volts you read on the appliance is the maximum voltage the appliance can handle. The actual voltage you will read at any outlet will range from 110 to 120 volts.
This is NOT A QUESTION But - about 100 years ago some power houses put it out, and it works just fine with most equipment ... but it's not standard practice.
183.33... Watts.
Household utility AC power is supplied at 60 HZ in the US and most of the rest of North America, and at 50 Hz in most of the rest of the world.
Less than 5 milliamps @ 110 volt.
No, it won't get enough power and won't work.
Sorry, won't work. You need a 110 volt supply.
Yes.
no
It should work okay.
What is the amount of power consumed by a 60 watt 220 volt lamp when it is connected across 110 volt supply?
Most traffic and city street lights run on 277 volts. So chances are you cannot power the light from your house power, which is 220 or 208/110 volt.
YELLOW
Purchase a power inverter.
It depends entirely on the device. Give it a try.
The formulas you are looking for is I = E/R.
Nominally 110 to 120 volt power strip is okay to connect to a standard outlet.