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  1. Dictionary
    receptacle
    /rɪˈsɛptəkl/

    noun

    • 1. a hollow object used to contain something: "fast-food receptacles"
    • 2. an electrical socket. North American

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. 3 hours ago · This interference, particularly in the 2.4 GHz band, can severely impact wireless communication devices like Wi-Fi and Bluetooth®, leading to reduced performance and poor user experiences. Recognizing the growing concern, the USB Implementers Forum (USB-IF) introduced the USB 3.2 RFI System-Level Test (RFI Test) in 2021.

  3. 1 day ago · "Open-air burning is defined as a fire in which any material is burned in the open or in a receptacle other than a furnace, incinerator, or other equipment connected to a stack or chimney," it stated.

  4. 3 hours ago · other like receptacle or envelope which immediately contains such substance, material, body or thing. Drug of addictionmeans any substance specified in Schedule Eight of the Poisons List. Labelincludes any tag, brand, mark or statement in writing on or attached to or used in connection with any container or package containing any poison, restricted

  5. 3 hours ago · Two main types of pipelines are currently in operation in the world: rigid and flexible pipes. Each one is very different in terms of the pipe body characterization: the rigid one is composed of a steel pipe with approximately 12 m long, linked through welds that can be executed on a yard onshore or onboard offshore, depending on the installation method; the flexible one consists of some ...

  6. 3 hours ago · sales unitmeans a receptacle, an area of shelving or any other thing from which tobacco products are dispensed when sold by retail, but does not include a tobacco vending machine. service areameans an area of a shop or retail premises to which members of the public do not ordinarily have access and from which sales of tobacco products are

  7. 3 hours ago · To adapt this technology to the home, a receptacle for gathering the dirt would need to be incorporated in the mechanism. Footnote 6 The earliest recorded sweeping machine designed for domestic use, which was patented in England by James Hume in 1811, consisted of “a box with wheels containing a rotating brush turned manually by means of a pulley connected to a handle or crank.”