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 telegraph ['teligrɑ:f]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 电报, 电报机

vi. 打电报

vt. 打电报给, 电汇, 流露, 显示出要...的样子

[电] 电报




    telegraph
    [ noun ]
    1. apparatus used to communicate at a distance over a wire (usually in Morse code)

    2. <noun.artifact>
    [ verb ]
    1. send cables, wires, or telegrams

    2. <verb.communication> cable wire


    Telegraph \Tel"e*graph\, n. [Gr. ? far, far off (cf. Lith. toli)
    + -graph: cf. F. t['e]l['e]graphe. See {Graphic}.]
    An apparatus, or a process, for communicating intelligence
    rapidly between distant points, especially by means of
    preconcerted visible or audible signals representing words or
    ideas, or by means of words and signs, transmitted by
    electrical action.

    Note: The instruments used are classed as indicator,
    type-printing, symbol-printing, or chemical-printing
    telegraphs, according as the intelligence is given by
    the movements of a pointer or indicator, as in Cooke &
    Wheatstone's (the form commonly used in England), or by
    impressing, on a fillet of paper, letters from types,
    as in House's and Hughe's, or dots and marks from a
    sharp point moved by a magnet, as in Morse's, or
    symbols produced by electro-chemical action, as in
    Bain's. In the offices in the United States the
    recording instrument is now little used, the receiving
    operator reading by ear the combinations of long and
    short intervals of sound produced by the armature of an
    electro-magnet as it is put in motion by the opening
    and breaking of the circuit, which motion, in
    registering instruments, traces upon a ribbon of paper
    the lines and dots used to represent the letters of the
    alphabet. See Illustration in Appendix.

    {Acoustic telegraph}. See under {Acoustic}.

    {Dial telegraph}, a telegraph in which letters of the
    alphabet and numbers or other symbols are placed upon the
    border of a circular dial plate at each station, the
    apparatus being so arranged that the needle or index of
    the dial at the receiving station accurately copies the
    movements of that at the sending station.

    {Electric telegraph}, or {Electro-magnetic telegraph}, a
    telegraph in which an operator at one station causes words
    or signs to be made at another by means of a current of
    electricity, generated by a battery and transmitted over
    an intervening wire.

    {Facsimile telegraph}. See under {Facsimile}.

    {Indicator telegraph}. See under {Indicator}.

    {Pan-telegraph}, an electric telegraph by means of which a
    drawing or writing, as an autographic message, may be
    exactly reproduced at a distant station.

    {Printing telegraph}, an electric telegraph which
    automatically prints the message as it is received at a
    distant station, in letters, not signs.

    {Signal telegraph}, a telegraph in which preconcerted
    signals, made by a machine, or otherwise, at one station,
    are seen or heard and interpreted at another; a semaphore.


    {Submarine telegraph cable}, a telegraph cable laid under
    water to connect stations separated by a body of water.

    {Telegraph cable}, a telegraphic cable consisting of several
    conducting wires, inclosed by an insulating and protecting
    material, so as to bring the wires into compact compass
    for use on poles, or to form a strong cable impervious to
    water, to be laid under ground, as in a town or city, or
    under water, as in the ocean.


    Telegraph \Tel"e*graph\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Telegraphed}; p.
    pr. & vb. n. {Telegraphing}.] [F. t['e]l['e]graphier.]
    To convey or announce by telegraph.

    1. But he did not telegraph to skeptical liberals or to newly wary conservatives just where he would stand on the questions awaiting the closely divided court - matters including abortion, civil rights and criminal justice.
    2. Asked about his future plans, he replied, "When you're in a fight, it's pretty important not to telegraph your punches."
    3. "I was stunned," said Ellen Conaway, Miss Schneider's campaign manager. "In all my years in the business I've never seen anyone telegraph their moves like that." "I expect as positive a campaign as both of us can wage.
    4. For a period of four years in the early 1900s, AT&T controlled Western Union but the U.S. government forced it to unload its interest in the telegraph company for antitrust reasons.
    5. "The big news when we were here was the assassination of President William McKinley and the 1906 San Francisco earthquake," Mrs. Smith said. "I remember it took so long to get any news out of San Francico because the telegraph was gone.
    6. "The entire law-and-order structure of ours is called upon to guarantee strict observance of the citizens' rights to the inviolability of private life and the home, privacy of correspondence, postal and telegraph messages," he said.
    7. These new estimates have travelled by bush telegraph among the economic talking classes, where they are now in vogue. They should not in fact have caused any surprise.
    8. The Bolsheviks withdrew so quickly that they failed to take the originals of their telegrams at the local telegraph office.
    9. Our entire legal system is designed to guarantee strict observance of the rights of citizens to the inviolability of their private life, home, the secrecy of telephone communication, postal and telegraph correspondence.
    10. The government accepted a $488.3 million (Canadian) bid from Memotec, a small Montreal-based data-communications concern, for Teleglobe, the exclusive provider of Canada's overseas telephone, telex and telegraph services.
    11. "We don't want to telegraph our punches, but we want people to know this isn't a fleeting fad," said Jack Devault, head of Life Support Services and one of the coordinators of Saturday's demonstration.
    12. Pacific Asset, MDC and Drexel also together own 6.5% to 33.2% of other telegraph and parent company publicly traded preferred stock issues.
    13. Kamal and Naqpit, however, were gunned down outside the local telegraph office in Larkana after sending stories to their papers about a news conference with Sindhi nationalists.
    14. Also under the restructuring, Western Union would be merged into its telegraph subsidiary, and holders of its debt and preferred securities would exchange those for new preferred stock.
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