The word revolt has the word volt in it.:p
The word "volt" comes from the man who created the standard of measuring this unit of electrical pressure, Allesandro Volta.
The unit of electrical potential is the volt. The volt was named for the Italian physicist Alessandro Volta.
The word "volt" is named after the Italian physicist Alessandro Volta.
Simply a Watt
Volt is the SI word chosen for the unit of electromotive force. It is named for the Italian physicist Allesandro Volta who invented the voltaic pile, possibly the first chemical battery.
The Japanese word for volt is simply ボルト(boruto). They're incredibly similar because ボルト is an English loanword.
The unit for electromotive force or electric potential in the centimeter-gram-second unit system is "volt".
Think of a 9-volt battery and you have your answer: electricity.
The term "volt" was named in honor of Alessandro Volta, an Italian physicist who invented the electric battery. Volta's work in developing the voltaic pile, an early form of battery, helped pave the way for the measurement of electrical potential difference, which led to the naming of the unit of electrical potential as the "volt" in his honor.
Let's see . . . volt - age . . . . bump-bump. Ah, there are two syllables in the word voltage.
Volt Vane Vain Vase Vans Vent
A volt is a volt is a volt.