While it is possible that the state could charge your boyfriend, the facts that your parents aren't charging him, you two are so close in age, and your age when the baby will be born, make it very unlikely that the state will try anything.
You have already been charged. There is no statute of limitation.
When a person is charged with a felony it can be reduced to a misdemeanor charge by the prosecuting attorney.
The past tense of charge is charged.
You could be charged with "non coustodial interferance"
A negative charge attracts a positive charge and repels a negative charge. OPPOSITES ATTRACT ;)
Protons, which are positively charged. The other particles that are in a nucleus are Neutrons, but Neutrons are not charged, Neutrons don't have a charge.
When an object is charged by contact, the object getting the charge has the same charge compared with that of the object giving the charge. so if the object giving the charge has a positive charge, so does the object getting the charge
No. Chargers charge batteries faster than they last. My mac for instance, takes 3 hours to charge and has a 7 hour battery.
No, the word 'charged' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to charge. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective (a charged battery, charged purchases).The noun forms of the verb to charge are charge, charger, and the gerund, charging.
Protons are positively charged Neutrons have no charge Electrons are negatively charged.
They are ALWAYS negatively charged. If positively charged it would be a positron and not an electron.
When an object is rubbed with a charged rod, the object shares the charge so that both have a charge of the same sign. In contrast, charging by induction gives an object the charge opposite that of the charged rod. so your object would be negatively charged.