Icon Créer jeu Créer jeu

E1TPR_04_Electicity_Vocabulary

Compléter

(12)
Watch the video about the story of electricity and fill the text with the right word.

Téléchargez la version papier pour jouer

Âge recommandé: 12 ans
34 fois fait

Créé par

Spain

Top 10 résultats

  1. 1
    00:32
    temps
    100
    but
  2. 2
    martin ramirez
    martin ramirez
    00:41
    temps
    100
    but
  3. 3
    01:04
    temps
    100
    but
  4. 4
    01:13
    temps
    100
    but
  5. 5
    01:20
    temps
    100
    but
  6. 6
    01:22
    temps
    100
    but
  7. 7
    02:12
    temps
    100
    but
  8. 8
    04:21
    temps
    100
    but
  9. 9
    06:17
    temps
    100
    but
  10. 10
    00:58
    temps
    92
    but
Voulez-vous apparaître dans le Top 10 de ce jeu? pour vous identifier.
Créez votre propre jeu gratuite à partir de notre créateur de jeu
Affrontez vos amis pour voir qui obtient le meilleur score dans ce jeu

Top Jeux

  1. temps
    but
  1. temps
    but
temps
but
temps
but
game-icon

Completar

E1TPR_04_Electicity_Vocabulary

Watch the video about the story of electricity and fill the text with the right word.

Francisco Mateos
1

battery Metals sparks electron charging excess particles electrics electricity

In Thale ? s language amber ( fossilized tree resin ) was called .
The name that was given ( by William Gilbert ) to those materials which displayed the same attractive properties of amber was .
Sir Thomas Browne coined the word to express the property that some materials have to attract others after rubbing them .
Which two substances did Charles Du Fay find he was unable to turn into electrics ? and fluids .
How many groups of electrics did Du Fay find in his experiments ? 2 .
Benjamin Franklin , keen on mischievous pranks , liked to electrify devices to produce large .
He likened ( compared ) the act of electrifying and de - electrifying a device to and discharging weapon .
Franklin proposed the idea that an electric discharges sparks like a military vessel fires it ? s canyons .
When Benjamin Franklin said an object was ? positively charged ? he meant that it had an of electrical fluid .
Thanks to J . J . Thomson we know that what Franklin called electric fluid is indeed the flow of small called electrons .