No. Magnets create an electric feild, not electricity.
However, when you spin a magnet inside a coil of wire (or you can spin the coil of wire instead), you will create an electrical current.
Electricity
No, magnets do not absorb electricity. Magnets create a magnetic field that can interact with electric currents, but they do not absorb or store electricity.
i have no idea... sorry! try wikipedia, or google!!
Michael Faraday was the first one who observed the production of electricity by moving magnets towards a coil of wire. This phenomenon is known as electromagnetic induction.
Lots of electricity ... which takes power.
electronic magnets as they work with electricity produced
No, bulbs do not make use of magnets to work. Light bulbs function by passing electricity through a filament, which then emits light and heat. Magnets are not involved in the process of generating light in bulbs.
No, magnets are not conductive. Magnets do not allow electricity to flow through them like conductive materials do.
Bar magnets are already magnetized. They don't need to add wire and electricity.
No, electricity does not flow through a magnet. Magnets exert a magnetic field, which can interact with objects containing electrical charge or current, but they do not conduct electricity themselves.
both magents and electricity have positive and negiteve charges
By rubbing two magnets together.