| A | B | 
| static electricity | the accumulation of excess electric charge on an object | 
| law of conservation of charge | states that the charge can be transferred from one object to another but cannot be created or destroyed | 
| conductor | material, such as copper wire, in which electrons can move easily | 
| insulator | material in which heat flows slowly | 
| charging by contact | process  of transferring charge between objects by touching or rubbing | 
| charging by induction | process of rearranging electrons on a neutral object by bringing a charged object close to it | 
| electric current | the net movement  of electric charges  in a single direction, measured in amperes | 
| voltage difference | related to the force that causes electric charges to flow; measured in volts | 
| circuit | closed conducting loop through which an electric current can flow | 
| resistance | tendency for a material to oppose electron flow and change electrical energy into thermal energy and light; measured  in ohms | 
| Ohm's Law | states that  the current in a circuit equals the voltage difference divided by the  resistance | 
| series circuit | circuit in which electric current has only one path to follow | 
| parallel circuit | circuit in which electric current has more than one path to follow | 
| electrical power | rate at which electrical energy is converted to another form of energy; expressed in watts |