telegraphy in English

noun
1
the science or practice of using or constructing communications systems for the transmission or reproduction of information.
Various modes of communication - railroads, telegraphy , telephony, broadcasting - have been enlisted as part of the nation building and cultural identity strategies of successive governments throughout Canadian history.

Use "telegraphy" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "telegraphy" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "telegraphy", or refer to the context using the word "telegraphy" in the English Dictionary.

1. The French engineer Émile Baudot used Gray codes in telegraphy in 1878.

2. Tesla has over 700 patents to his name: radio, wireless telegraphy, remote control, robotics.

3. Apparatus and instruments for telecommunications, telegraphy and telephony, image and sound transmitters and receivers, telephone switchboards

4. The dispatching of a signal, message, or other form of intelligence by wire, radio, telegraphy, telephony, facsimile, or other means.

5. In 1909 Braun shared the Nobel Prize for physics with Marconi for "contributions to the development of wireless telegraphy."

6. For example, the Call Center System of Mobile Company's 18 Telegraphy Company's 1000 and 10000 are very familiar brands for consumers.

7. Becquerel made a special study of the voltaic cell, telegraphy, and magnetism and wrote several books on these subjects.

8. Radio field operations at the Granges de la Brasque, old military radio and telegraphy outpost part of the Maginot line (1930s)

9. Also called capillary action ‘In applied mathematics he studied optics, electricity, telegraphy, Capillarity, elasticity, thermodynamics, potential theory, quantum theory, theory of …

10. These are telegraphy receivers in which the modulated signals entering by cable are converted into electrical impulses to control the recording electrodes.

11. 26 The great law of vibration is based on like producing like. Like causes produce like effects. Wireless telegraphy, the phonograph and the radio are based on this law.

12. · Except in the course of legal proceedings or for the purpose of any report thereof, discloses any information as to the contents, sender or addressee of any such message, being information which would not have come to his knowledge but for the use of wireless telegraphy apparatus by him or by another person.

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