A spring; a fountain., A large wave or billow; a great, rolling swell of water, produced generally by a high wind., The motion of, or produced by, a great wave., The tapered part of a windlass barrel or a capstan, upon which the cable surges, or slips., To swell; to rise hifg and roll., To slip along a windlass., To let go or slacken suddenly, as a rope; as, to surge a hawser or messenger; also, to slacken the rope about (a capstan).
abiotic
A storm surge.
Each line would need a surge protector so you would need 3 single-phase surge protectors.
Possibly, but that's kind of missing the whole point of a surge protector. The surge protector exists to protect the things that are plugged into it. If you're not using those devices anyway during the storm, sure, go ahead and unplug the surge protector... but you could also have just unplugged the devices themselves from the wall and not bought a surge protector in the first place. Also, storms don't directly damage surge protectors. Stopping surges damages surge protectors. If there's no surge, it doesn't matter if the surge protector is plugged in or not.
Tidal gauges usually measure the storm surge.
abiotic
A book surge refers to a sudden increase in demand for a particular book or books, often triggered by external factors such as media coverage, events, or trends. This surge can lead to a temporary spike in sales and popularity for the book(s) in question.
Serge and surge
shortage in the electrical cored meaning you need to move out quick
Surge is a noun (a surge) and a verb (to surge). It is not an adjective.
There are five: Payback Surge, Thunder Surge, Fire Surge, Barrier Surge, Vitality Surge.
A homophone for "surge up" or "fly high" is "soar up." It sounds the same but is spelled differently and has a different meaning.
Surge goes by Surge Valdez, and Sergio Sebastian Valdez.
Yes.
There is likely no difference. Neither is accepted terminology for a surge suppressive device (SPD). If these products have been tested by safety organizations such as CSA (Canada) or UL (US) or tested to international surge standards (IEEE, IEC), then they should bare the correct terminology, otherwise, they are not tested to provide protection to equipment during a surge. Surge Absorber acts as a load that utilizes the high current until it exhausts. but the surge suppressor diverts the high current into ground without reaching the sensitive parts of the circuit. Surge absorber degrades faster than a surge suppressor.
You cant a surge is a natural thing.
I/you/we/they surge. He/she/it surges.