Unscrew any lamp or disconnect any appliance. If the house is connected in series, everything else in the house will stop working!
Always parallel. Homes should never be wired in series. (That would be like the old Christmas tree lights where, if one bulb burned out, the entire string would not light up.)
Every electrical device plugged into a wall-socket in your house, as well as every socket with nothing plugged into it, is in parallel with every other one. The only series-wired electrical devices in your house are the light-switches.
Either 110 v or 220 and 110, depending on how your house is wired.
A single load is neither series nor parallel. But in a house, for example, all the loads are in parallel because they all work on the same voltage.
Receptacles are not wired in series. Receptacles are actually wired in parallel, what this means is that all phase wires (black) in a receptacle's box should terminate to the brass screws on each device, and all neutral (white) wires in the box should terminate on the silver screws on each device.
My house is wired using parallel circuits. How did they wire yours?
it would be kind of both
Everything in a house is wired in parallel. If you had lights is series when one burns out they would all go out, much like cheap Christmas lights.
They are wired in parallel, series and series - parallel.
House lights are wired in parallel. If they were in series, when one burned out, all would. Christmas lights are wired in a combination of series and parallel - roughly 50 lights in each series string. that's why if one bulb burns out, a section of the lights goes out.
In parallel.
Parallel
Parallel. Simple.
Electrical outlets are wired in parallel.
paralell
Any number of fresh D cells wired in parallel will yield a voltage of 1.5 volts.
Houshold circuits, like all non-trivial circuits, are wired in series-parallel. Switches are in series with loads. Loads, and switches with loads as combined units, are in parallel with each other.