Electricity.
220 volts. In the US.
who invented the clothes dryer that used heat from the stove
Usually 220 to 240 VAC.
G T Sampson invented the clothes dryer
You bet it will.
208 to 240 volts depending on your local power supply.
240 Volts. <><><> In USA, Canada and other countries using a similar 60 Hz houshold electricity supply system, they are dual-voltage. Some of their components, such as the timers, use 120 V while the heating element uses 240V.
on the stove, oven microwave, a heater, the sun, and dryer
You can look at the rating plate on each appliance and see how many watts it is. So for example a 1500 w hair dryer, or an 1100 w microwave oven. A stove and an electric clothes dryer use more than that (but I have gas for those appliances, so I cannot look). A refrigerator would use a lot too, but I cannot see the plate on that one either. If it does not list watts but lists amps, then: Volts * Amps = Watts. Note that the 'big' appliances like the stove and clothes dryer are usually 240 volts, not 120 V.
Household appliances usually have a voltage of either 110 or 220 volts; there should be a sticker somewhere that tells you the voltage for specific appliances. Make sure you don't plug it into the wrong voltage. Especially plugging an equipment designed for 110V into an outlet that gives 220V will burn your equipment.
Electrical work is dangerous and should only be performed by a qualified electrician
No. -They are different amperages and different plugs. You can NOT swap them.