| 单词 | telegraph | 
| 释义 | telegraphn. 1.   a.  Any of various devices designed to convey messages over a distance using visible or audible signs or signals; cf. semaphore n. 1. Also (esp. in early use): a network of such devices. Now historical.Although devices for this purpose have been used since ancient times (see sense  1b), the word telegraph was first applied to the semaphoric device invented by Claude Chappe in France in 1792, which consisted of an upright post with movable arms, the signals being made by positioning the arms according to a prearranged code. The term has been applied subsequently to devices which convey messages by various other means, including movable disks, flashes of light, sounds of bells or horns, etc. ΘΚΠ society > communication > indication > signalling > visual signalling > semaphore > 			[noun]		 > apparatus telegraph1793 tellograph1796 semaphore1815 semaphore signal1826 shutter-telegraph1859 bell-telegrapha1877 1793    Times 12 Aug.  				M. Chappe, after many years study, and a great variety of experiments, has invented a Telegraphe, in the form of an oblong parallelogram. 1794    European Mag. & London Rev. Sept. 166/2  				The plan of this Telegraphe is said to be by beacons on heights, at the distance of 12 or 15 miles from each other. 1813    J. W. Croker in  L. J. Jennings Croker Papers 		(1884)	 I. ii. 53  				The Plymouth telegraph announces another complete victory of Lord W. over Soult on the 30th. 1863    W. Ladd in  Rep. Brit. Assoc. Advancem. Sci. 19  				On an Acoustic Telegraph. 1915    Jrnl. Electr. Workers & Operators June 367/2  				In the military use of the optical telegraph, we had the beginnings of state ownership. 1984    A. Cameron Scenes from Sea & City 273/1  				By the shore shutter telegraph system it then took only four minutes to reach the Admiralty. 2006    D. G. Schwartz Roll Bones ix. 205  				The Blancs hit upon..the idea of using the French government's optical telegraph or télégraphe aerien to receive advance information.  b.  Used retrospectively of any of various similar devices used or proposed in earlier periods. historical. ΚΠ 1794    R. Edwards Let. 12 Sept. in  Oracle & Public Advertiser 15 Sept.  				The Telegraphe..is two thousand years old, and..the present is no more than an improvement, by means of the Telescope and reflecting glasses, on Polybius's plan. 1794    Oracle & Public Advertiser 13 Sept.  				The Telegraphe was originally the invention of William Amontons, a very ingenious philosopher, born in Normandy, in the year 1663... This philosopher..pointed out a method, to acquaint people at a great distance, and in a very little time, with whatever one pleased. 1808    J. Macdonald Treat. Telegr. Communication 37  				Julius Africanus minutely details a mode of spelling words by a Telegraph. It appears, that fires of various substances, were the means made use of. 1842    Penny Cycl. XXIV. 145/2  				Bishop Wilkins,..after describing this telegraph of Polybius, mentions another which requires only three lights or torches. 1902    Cassier's Mag. Jan. 213/1  				It will not be difficult to perceive a close relationship..between some of the wireless telegraph systems in vogue thousands of years ago, especially those that employed the luminiferous ether as the communicating medium, and the wireless telegraph systems of to-day. 1946    A. Still Soul of Lodestone iii. 69  				Improvements in these intangible magnetic telegraphs, with emphasis laid on the sympathy existing between the compass needles at the dispatching and receiving stations, were made by Strada in the year 1617. 2008    P. Berloquin Hidden Codes & Grand Designs i. 8  				Aeneas's telegraph had to work with opaque earthenware vessels.  c.  figurative and in extended use. Formerly: †a sign, a signal (obsolete). Later (frequently with modifying word): a means of conveying information by signs to someone at a distance. Now rare.In later use perhaps with elements of sense  3c. ΚΠ 1795    J. O'Keeffe Irish Mimic  i. i. 6  				Love is a monstrous telegraphe:..you cou'd read without spectacles, that slighted passion is a piteous case. 1817    S. T. Coleridge Blessed are ye that Sow 103  				When princely capitals are often but the Telegraphs of distant calamity. 1891    ‘Old Time’ Convict Hulk ‘Success’ 20  				The ‘telegraph’ was very extensively worked on board these hulks... The ‘telegraph’ was a system of speaking from one cell to another by means of tapping on the walls. 1934    Daily Courier 		(Connellsville, Pa.)	 4 May 11/1  				The beat of the tom-tom serves a double purpose. It is music and rhythm..and it is the jungle telegraph. 1942    Pop. Mech. Nov. 30/2  				The narrow gauge engineers used the ‘smoke telegraph’ to keep track of each other... They slowed down when they saw the smoke of an approaching train. 1969    New Yorker 14 June 76/2  				He would look down at his plate and find two steaks there. He knew what was happening. A message had come from the kitchen, on the Afro-American telegraph.  d.  Nautical. An apparatus for relaying orders from the bridge on a ship to the engine room, typically consisting of identical dials, indicating direction and speed, which are connected by means of cables and pulleys. Cf. telegraph dial n. at  Compounds 2. Now chiefly historical.Setting the hand of the dial on the bridge causes the one in the engine room to move to the same position, while simultaneously sounding a bell or other alarm. Some modern versions of this apparatus employ electrical signals and indicator lights. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > equipment of vessel > other equipment of vessel > 			[noun]		 > other equipment rack1691 ice hook1694 searcher1775 fumigation-lamp1815 mete-stick1815 boat axe1820 devil's claw1833 telegraph1842 boat slide1854 anchor ball1858 umbrella warping1867 anchor ball1942 coffee grinder1952 1842    Polytechnic Jrnl. 7 265  				A Marine Telegraph has been patented by Mr Hughes, of No. 158 Strand, which has much merit..as a means of putting the person in command [of a steam vessel] in direct communication with the engineer. 1897    G. N. Boothby Beautiful White Devil xi. 187  				Next moment the officer of the watch had bounded to the engine-room telegraph, there was a confused ringing of bells in the bowels of the ship, and..we were under weigh once more. 1933    Pop. Sci. Monthly Nov. 108/1  				Suddenly, over the soft purring of idling turbines, came the clanging of the bridge telegraph: port outboard propeller—slow—ahead! 1987    W. Hagelund Whalers no More i. 19  				The skipper, wedged between the telegraph and the binnacle, was shouting at Roy to get her head up into the weather. 2005    National Fisherman Feb. 35/2  				He was listening for the bells that sounded whenever the skipper in the wheelhouse changed the engine-speed command on the brass telegraph. ‘We had full ahead, half speed, slow and stop, and the same in reverse,’ Christopher says.  2.  Used in the titles of newspapers. ΚΠ 1794    S. T. Coleridge Lett. I. 122  				I will accept of the reporter's place to the ‘Telegraph’ and live upon a guinea a week. 1828    N.-Y. Spectator 12 Feb.  				The following is the article of the Telegraph which occasioned the preceding cutting remarks upon the redoubtable Duff Green. 1898    Insurance Economist Mar. 1/2  				The Morning Telegraph, of New York, received these letters and sent a reporter to the Home Office. 1944    Times 17 Oct. 3/4  				The Sydney Morning Herald will publish tomorrow a broadsheet of six pages in cooperation with the Sun, Daily Telegraph, and Daily Mirror. 1985    A. Blond Book Bk. ix. 142  				Nicholas Bagnall and David Holloway have run the Telegraph's book pages for yonks. 2014    Daily Tel. 7 Jan. 18/1  				The Telegraph reported the sulphurous response to a wizard wheeze from the retailer SportsDirect.  3.   a.  A device or system for transmitting (and receiving) messages one character at a time over a distance by means of electrical signals carried over a wire or (in later use) by radio waves, esp. one in which the signals are created by making and breaking an electrical circuit, causing movements of a needle or pointer in the receiver. More fully (esp. in early use)  electric telegraph,  magnetic telegraph. Now chiefly historical.The most widely used device of this kind employed Morse code to represent characters audibly or visually. Other forms of receiver pointed to characters upon a dial, printed or traced the message upon a prepared strip of paper, etc.				 [In electrical telegraph   (see quot. 1797) after Spanish telégrafo eléctrico (1795 in a memoir by F. Salva i Campillo, the source referred to in the quot.).]			dial telegraph, needle telegraph, printing telegraph, etc.: see first element. See also radio-telegraph n., wireless telegraph n. ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > telegraphy or telephony > telegraphy > telegraph > 			[noun]		 telly1796 telegraph1797 telelectrograph1857 thought-conductor1889 magneto-telegraph1890 set?1891 1797    Monthly Mag. Feb. 148/1  				Dr. Don Francis[c]o Salva had read, at the Royal Academy of Sciences, at Barcelona, a Memoir on the Application of Electricity to the Telegraph, and presented..an Electrical Telegraph of his own invention. 1823    F. Ronalds Descr. Electr. Telegr. 5  				This set of experiments appeared to afford no grounds for abandoning the project of an electric telegraph. 1845    P. Hawker Diary 		(1893)	 II. 264  				I saw the magnetic telegraph at the railway station. 1881    W. McK. Springer in  N. Amer. Rev. Apr. 369  				In the brief space of thirty years the telegraphs of the world have grown to nearly half a million miles of line, and more than a million miles of wire. 1896    Yorks. Herald 26 Dec. 3/6  				Signor Guglielmo Marconi has devised a telegraph in which he utilises such ‘electrostatic waves’. 1926    T. E. Lawrence Seven Pillars 		(subscribers' ed.)	 cxi. 590  				Young and I cut the telegraph, here an important network of trunk and local lines. 1985    J. A. Michener Texas xi. 797  				Emma Rusk, safe in her little town four hundred miles northwest of Indianola, heard of the disaster by telegraph one day after it happened. 2006    V. Smil Transforming 20th Cent. vii. 308  				Both telegraph and radio were initially expected to reduce or eliminate conflicts as they promoted better communication.  b.  A message sent by telegraph; a telegram. Now historical. ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > telegraphy or telephony > telegraphy > 			[noun]		 > telegraphic message telegraph message1806 telegraph1821 telegram1852 wire1856 flash1857 telegrapheme1857 telepheme1857 gram1891 tar1893 1821    G. R. Gleig Narr. Campaigns Brit. Army vii. 89  				We had not proceeded many miles from the river's mouth, when a telegraph from the admiral gave orders for the troops to be in readiness to land. 1857    Lady Canning Let. fr. Calcutta 12 May in  A. Hare Two Noble Lives 		(1893)	 II. 161  				A telegraph had come telling of a violent outbreak of the 3rd cavalry at Meerut. 1861    C. M. Yonge Stokesley Secret x. 149  				Suppose a telegraph should come! 1906    W. E. Quinby in  Mich. Hist. Coll. 30 514  				The telegraph arrived early in the evening and the paper was ready for the press by eleven o'clock. 1993    R. M. Maxon Struggle for Kenya iv. 118  				By the time this telegraph arrived at the CO, Northey had been consulted. 2014    Cape Argus 		(Nexis)	 24 Dec. 13  				British lieutenant Bruce Bairnsfather, received a telegraph reading, ‘War off, return home’..but it was to no lasting avail.  c.  figurative and in extended use. A means of rapid and concise communication; an instance of this. Also (with modifying word): an informal means of conveying information rapidly, a grapevine.bush telegraph, moccasin telegraph, etc.: see the first element. ΚΠ 1864    J. R. Lowell Fireside Trav. 123  				The magnetic telegraph of human sympathy flashes swift news from brain to brain. 1886    ‘S. Coolidge’ What Katy did Next iv. 96  				Hearts have a telegraph of their own whose messages are as sure and swift as any of those sent over the material lines. 1964    D. Macarthur Reminisc.  vi. 206  				News of the first such shipment spread rapidly by the ‘bamboo telegraph’ through the Philippines. 2010    N.Y. Times 		(National ed.)	 6 June (Week in Review section) 9/3  				‘Look’ is shorthand for ‘if you'd just listen to me, you'd understand’. It is an aggressive telegraph of summary judgment.  4.  A fast stagecoach, or similar lighter vehicle, used in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Cf. telegraph coach n. at  Compounds 2. Now historical and rare. ΘΚΠ society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > cart, carriage, or wagon > carriage for conveying persons > 			[noun]		 > types of carriage > other carriages dilly1786 telegraph1799 araba1814 station wagon1868 rumbelow1881 1799    J. Fuller Hist. Berwick upon Tweed xiv. 454  				A coach called the Telegraph ran from this house from March 1798 to March 1799. 1810    S. Green Reformist II. 130  				The whimsical vehicle which conveys the man of high ton, be it either dog-cart, telegraph, or barouchette. 1834    New Sporting Mag. Feb. 245/2  				I once upset the Southampton Telegraph; yet..there wasn't a soul hurt—except the coachman and guard. 1888    Eng. Illustr. Mag. Jan. 307/1  				Had they been travelling..by the Telegraph, the fastest coach of the age,..they would not have been at Salisbury at all. 1983    H. Hanson Coaching Days iv. 47  				The Pilot and Telegraph ran in spirited opposition between Leeds and Birmingham.  5.  slang. ΘΚΠ society > communication > information > informing on or against > 			[noun]		 > informer wrayerc1000 wrobberc1300 discoverera1400 denunciator1474 informer1503 denouncer1533 detector1541 delatora1572 sycophant1579 inquisitor1580 scout1585 finger man1596 emphanista1631 quadruplator1632 informant1645 eastee-man1681 whiddler1699 runner1724 stag1725 snitch1785 qui tam1788 squeak1795 split1819 clype1825 telegraph1825 snitcher1827 Jack Nasty1837 pigeon1847 booker1863 squealer1865 pig1874 rounder1884 sneak1886 mouse1890 finger1899 fizgig1902 screamer1902 squeaker1903 canary1912 shopper1924 narker1932 snurge1933 cheese eater1935 singer1935 tip-off1941 top-off1941 tout1959 rat fink1961 whistle-blower1970 the mind > attention and judgement > enquiry > investigation, inspection > secret observation, spying > 			[noun]		 > a secret observer, spy > a spy or scout spy13.. espierc1384 espialc1386 especiala1500 espya1500 watchmanc1515 escout1560 espioun1636 emissary1663 telegraph1825 1825    C. M. Westmacott Eng. Spy I. 162  				Dick's a trump and no telegraph.  b.  Australian. A person who alerts a bushranger to the movements of potential threats, esp. the police. Cf. bush telegraph n. at bush n.1 Compounds 2. Now historical.In quot. 1866: a network of such people. ΘΚΠ society > communication > information > informing on or against > 			[noun]		 > informer > police informer setter1630 nose1789 mouchard1802 rat1818 stool-pigeon1830 knark1851 police informer1851 nark1859 telegraph1864 copper1885 sarbut1897 Noah's Ark1898 stool1906 snout1910 finger1914 policeman1923 stoolie1924 shelf1926 grass1929 grasshopper1937 grasser1950 stukach1969 supergrass1975 1864    Goulburn 		(New S. Wales)	 Herald 17 Aug. 2/3  				These young scoundrels have got their ‘telegraphs’ in town, and there is not a stir the police can make but it is known. 1866    Tumut & Adelong 		(New S. Wales)	 Times 1 Jan. 2/3  				They approached to within one hundred yards of the camp unobserved, and then it was apparent that the ‘telegraph’ had done its work. 1888    ‘R. Boldrewood’ Robbery under Arms ii. 28  				Warrigal [was sent out] to meet one of our telegraphs..and to bring us any information he could pick up. 1908    C. White John Vane, Bushranger xv. 76  				One of our ‘telegraphs’ rode up and told us that a party of three police had just gone along the road. 1948    F. Clune Wild Colonial Boys 329  				The police were a quarter of a mile away, but they saw him and beckoned..'A telegraph!' yelled Sanderson. `Follow him, men!'. 1970    H. McQueen New Britannia xi. 139  				Even the beloved [Ned] Kelly found it expedient to insult his ‘telegraphs’ with a percentage of his takings.  6.  Cricket. A scoreboard displaying the number of runs scored, wickets taken, etc., at a cricket match, in large figures so as to be visible at a distance. Cf. telegraph board n. at  Compounds 2. Now historical and rare. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > cricket > umpiring and scoring > 			[noun]		 > score > scoreboard telegraph board1841 telegraph1849 the tins1903 1849    Sussex Agric. Express 8 Sept. 6/4  				At the close of the first innings the telegraph showed to the people a score of 61 runs. 1859    All Year Round 23 July 305  				There was a proper telegraph to show the ‘runs got’ and the ‘wickets down’. 1915    Amer. Cricketer July 152/2  				Of this total, R. Comacho, going in first, got 99 not out, and the telegraph showed but 67 up when 9 wickets were down. 1984    A. G. Bagot Trav., Sport & Hunting India & Central Amer.  i. vii. 77  				The telegraph showed a hundred and four runs, three wickets, last man sixty-eight. 2015    J. Lazenby Strangers Who came Home viii. 120  				Alec Bannerman was foolishly run out with the telegraph showing only 14 runs.  7.  Any of several cultivated varieties of long, thin-skinned cucumber developed in England. Frequently attributive. ΚΠ 1850    Gardeners' Chron. 12 Jan. 17/2 		(advt.)	  				Batley's Telegraph.—Light green, fine form, very prolific, 20 to 28 inches. 1882    Garden 14 Jan. 31/1  				A few seeds of Telegraph [cucumbers] may now be sown in small pots. 1923    Farmers' Bull. 		(U.S. Dept. Agric.)	 No. 1320. 13  				The English forcing type is represented by such varieties as the Telegraph and the Duke of Edinburgh. 1997    D. B. Munro  & E. Small Veg. of Canada 168 		(caption)	  				English telegraph greenhouse cucumber. 2008    C. Stocks Forgotten Fruits 		(2009)	 91  				The smooth-skinned Telegraph was introduced by the Victorian nursery firm of William Rollison and Sons. Compounds C1.   General attributive (chiefly in sense  3a).   telegraph boy  n. ΚΠ 1849    Boston Courier 13 Sept.  				James McGrath, the loafer, who attempted to rob the telegraph boy, was sentenced to six months imprisonment. 1928    A. Huxley Point Counter Point xxxii. 507  				A telegraph boy on a red bicycle was shooting down the mews towards them. 2015    Tamworth Herald 		(Nexis)	 9 Apr.  				I was a telegraph boy during the war, when manpower and van power were in short supply.   telegraph cable  n.				 [compare cable n. 3]			 ΚΠ 1851    Essex Standard 26 Sept.  				The steamer Blazer, with the great Submarine Telegraph cable on board, is now halfway across the Channel. 1915    E. Hausmann Telegr. Engin. ix. 269  				Aerial and underground telegraph cables are formed of any desired number of annealed copper wires. 1992    J. Hamilton-Paterson Seven-tenths  v. i. 156  				A section of telegraph cable was fetched up for repair off the coast of Sardinia.   telegraph clerk  n. ΚΠ 1847    Examiner 6 Feb. 92/1  				The telegraph-clerk at the Dover station..is supposed to have started on one side when the whistle was turned on. 1914    Everybody's Mag. July 141/1  				A telegraph-clerk in an outlying district of the Sudan found the desolation getting the better of his nerves. 2008    New Yorker 17 Mar. 51/2  				They were typists, telegraph clerks, and secretaries in Auschwitz I.   telegraph company  n. ΚΠ 1825    Morning Chron. 29 July  				Telegraph Company.—This highly important Association..promises..to bring London and Liverpool..within one hour's communication. 1939    Fortune Nov. 91  				To ensure privacy, telegraph companies use high-speed transmitters that send messages that can be picked up only by automatic receiving apparatus. 2008    J. R. Winkler Nexus ii. 55  				American telegraph companies attempted to improve hemispheric cable connections.   telegraph house  n. ΚΠ 1808    Earl Dundonald Let. 28 Sept. in  Autobiogr. Seaman 		(1860)	 I. 288  				The newly constructed semaphoric telegraphs..have been blown up and completely demolished, together with their telegraph houses. 1923    R. Kipling Land & Sea Tales 239  				My father is at the telegraph-house sending telegrams. 2009    R. Stachurski Longitude By Wire xi. 165  				The Great Eastern, gliding calmly in,..drops her anchor in front of the telegraph house.   telegraph instrument  n. ΚΠ 1845    U.S. Patent 4,318 1/1  				Telegraph-instruments at opposite extremities of the same or of a single wire..may be kept in constant readiness for use in conjunction with a galvanic battery. 1923    National Geographic Mag. Apr. 402/1  				Among loud-speaking telephones, telegraph instruments, and electric lights, the interlocking station director is a commanding general who is in constant touch with every sector held by his forces. 2009    R. Thomson Struct. Change Mech. Age vi. 180  				Electricians were also listed in city directories, selling telegraph instruments, batteries, electromedical devices, and their own services.   telegraph line  n.				 [compare line n.2 1e]			 ΚΠ 1839    Standard 		(London)	 2 Sept. 4/3  				The telegraph is worked by merely pressing small brass keys..acting..upon various hands placed upon a dial-plate at the other end of the telegraph line. 1911    Mariner′s Mirror 1 161*  				The signal stations in the South of England were completed before the first of the telegraph lines. 2000    Cutting Edge: Encycl. Adv. Technol. 61/2  				Because telegraph lines were easy to tap..a new cryptographic system emerged.   telegraph message  n. ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > telegraphy or telephony > telegraphy > 			[noun]		 > telegraphic message telegraph message1806 telegraph1821 telegram1852 wire1856 flash1857 telegrapheme1857 telepheme1857 gram1891 tar1893 1806    Northampton Mercury 30 Aug.  				Addition to the Telegraph Message from Portsmouth. 1966    McGraw-Hill Encycl. Sci. & Technol. 		(rev. ed.)	 XIII. 423/2  				In overseas communication, telegraph messages usually are referred to as cablegrams or radiograms. 2002    A. N. Wilson Victorians 		(2003)	 xxxv. 507  				Well-wishers from all over..saluting their sovereign with bunting and telegraph messages and songs.   telegraph office  n. ΚΠ 1803    Hampshire Tel. & Portsmouth Gaz. 4 July  				Wanted, a small well-conditioned Private House in Portsmouth—Apply at the Telegraph Office. 1920    Times 6 Nov. 3/3 		(advt.)	  				Superior accommodation;..post and telegraph office and 'phone exchange. 2007    E. Knox Dreamquake 		(2009)	 vi. 58  				The telegraph office was brightly lit. There was one key man and two clerks in the booth.   telegraph operator  n. ΚΠ 1846    North Amer. 		(Philadelphia)	 13 Nov. 2/3  				We have experienced many courtesies from the telegraph operators. 1908    Examiner 		(Launceston, Tasmania)	 7 Apr. 1/7  				Telegraph operators in India are on a ‘go slow’ strike. 1996    E. A. Proulx Accordion Crimes 		(1997)	 87  				The railroad built a station, manned it with a stationmaster, a telegraph operator, a freight manager.   telegraph service  n. ΚΠ 1815    Parl. Deb. 1st Ser. 30 805  				This salary, he thought, should have expired with the duty for which it was given, for the Telegraph service must have ceased during the last year. 1914    Q. Jrnl. Econ. 28 582  				From these statistics the Postmaster General infers that..American people might expect a more efficient telegraph service. 2015    Australian 		(Nexis)	 4 May (Business section) 32  				Quality infrastructure was dirt tracks, paddle steamers and the telegraph service.   telegraph station  n. ΚΠ 1806    Caledonian Mercury 17 July  				She communicated by signal to the telegraph station, that she had Mr Basilico on board. 1913    Year-bk. Wireless Telegr. & Teleph. 85  				For the purpose of preventing interference with the working of any other wireless telegraph station. 2015    Centralian Advocate 		(Austral.)	 		(Nexis)	 17 Apr. 5  				Alan Jolley was..working at a telegraph station in Western Australia, in the 1950s.   telegraph wire  n. ΚΠ 1841    Civil Engineer & Architect's Jrnl. 4 239  				Protecting tube for the conducting of telegraph wires, either carried on posts with a railing over it or under ground. 1922    St. Nicholas July 993/1  				Lightening-arresters, whose object it is to protect telephone and telegraph wires and their operators. 2014    Irish Daily Mail 		(Nexis)	 2 May 34  				Other memorable encounters include..swallows gathering on telegraph wires before they head south for winter.  C2.     telegraph blank  n. U.S. (now historical and rare) = telegraph form n. ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > telegraphy or telephony > telegraphy > 			[noun]		 > telegraphic message > telegraph form telegraph form1859 telegraph blank1865 message form1900 1865    Detroit Free Press 29 Sept.  				Both the envelope and telegraph blank had been obtained by theft or some other improper manner. 1946    Life 23 Dec. 4/1  				Your holiday message will be delivered on colorful, attractive Yuletide telegraph blanks. 2007    J. J. Riley Another One of Riley's Pianos 15  				Jimmy would work the Teletype machine taking the messages directly off the machine, gluing them in the telegraph blanks.   telegraph block  n. 		 †(a) Nautical a long narrow casing containing a number of small grooved wheels by which, in signalling, several flags may be raised at the same time (obsolete);		 (b) a section of railway line with a signal at each end connected by telegraph (now historical and rare). ΚΠ 1863    S. B. Luce Seamanship 		(ed. 2)	 v. 63  				Telegraph-Blocks are pyramidal shaped blocks, with a number of small brass sheaves, used for making telegraphic signals. 1895    Proc. Amer. Soc. Railroad Superintendents 1894 39  				I would like to ask Mr. Wattson what the difference is between the signals of the telegraph blocks and those of the Sykes systems. 1922    H. Pender Handbk. Electr. Engineers 		(ed. 2)	 1408  				The manually-operated signals used in connection with the telephone or telegraph blocks are located at passenger stations. 2003    A. J. Bianculli Trains & Technol. IV. viii. 164  				The system invented in England by W. R. Sykes in 1875—a combination of a telegraph block system with interlocked signals and switches—was claimed to be the first interlocked block system.   telegraph board  n. Cricket a scoreboard displaying large figures which are visible at a distance; = sense  6   (now historical); (later also) a similar scoreboard used in other sports, such as horse racing. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > recording score > 			[noun]		 > scoreboard scoring board1822 scoreboard1831 telegraph board1841 marking board1850 board1883 leader board1970 society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > cricket > umpiring and scoring > 			[noun]		 > score > scoreboard telegraph board1841 telegraph1849 the tins1903 1841    Newcastle Courant 25 June  ii. 2/6  				A telegraph board was erected. 1897    ‘Tivoli’ Short Innings iii. 48  				The hundred appeared on the telegraph board. Still the batsmen hit. 1920    J. D. Beresford Imperfect Mother ii. 68  				Graham was out; and his spread-eagled wicket advertised the cause of his dismissal. The telegraph board was being hoisted. 2011    S. A. Riess Sport of Kings & Kings of Crime vi. 150  				The horse was a ‘starter’ once the telegraph board posted its name as a participant. ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > telegraphy or telephony > telegraphy > 			[noun]		 > vehicle telegraph coach1796 telegraph carriage1870 1870    Glasgow Herald 2 Aug. 2/4  				The telegraph carriage is formed in two compartments, that in front being like the coupe of a railway carriage, serves for an office, while in the after part it carries the reel of wire. 1903    Railroad Telegrapher May 708/2  				The U. S. Army is receiving the first consignment of portable wireless telegraph carriages from Germany.   telegraph clock  n. now historical a clock which is synchronized with a distant clock by means of electrical signals carried over a telegraph wire; (also) a system for synchronizing clocks in this way. ΘΚΠ the world > time > instruments for measuring time > clock > 			[noun]		 > other types of clock watch-clock1592 German clock1598 quarter clocka1631 wheel-clock1671 table clocka1684 month clock1712 astronomical clock1719 musical clock1721 repeater1725 Tompion1727 pulling clock1733 regulator1735 eight-day clock1741 regulator clock1750 French clock1757 repetition clock1765 day clock1766 striker1778 chiming clock1789 cuckoo-clock1789 night clock1823 telltale1827 carriage clock1828 fly-clock1830 steeple clock1830 telltale clock1832 skeleton clock1842 telegraph clock1842 star clock1850 weight-clock1850 prison clock1853 crystal clock1854 pillar scroll top clock1860 sheep's-head clock1872 presentation clock1875 pillar clock1880 stop-clock1881 Waterbury1882 calendar-clock1884 ting-tang clock1884 birdcage clock1886 sheep's head1887 perpetual calendar1892 bracket clock1894 Act of Parliament clock1899 cartel clock1899 banjo-clock1903 master clock1904 lantern clock1913 time clock1919 evolutionary clock1922 lancet clock1922 atomic clock1927 quartz clock1934 clock radio1946 real-time clock1953 organ clock1956 molecular clock1974 travelling clock2014 1842    C. Wheatstone in  Lit. Gaz. 18 June 423/1  				The telegraph-clock itself was shewn in action in the library on the same evening. 1919    Pop. Sci. Monthly Apr. 112/3  				First set the watch to the best time obtainable, preferably a telegraph clock. 2013    D. R. Coen Earthquake Observers iv. 84  				With standardized time still a novelty, few people could be relied on to calibrate their house clock or pocket watch to the ‘telegraph’ clock at the local railway station.   telegraph coach  n. now historical and rare a fast stagecoach; cf. sense  4. ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > telegraphy or telephony > telegraphy > 			[noun]		 > vehicle telegraph coach1796 telegraph carriage1870 society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > public service vehicle > 			[noun]		 > stagecoach or mail coach > specific type long-coach1672 telegraph coach1796 mail-gig1813 mail diligence1837 1796    Morning Post 19 July  				Worcester Telegraph Coach, every Monday, Thursday, and Saturday Noon, at One o'Clock. 1835    N.Y. Commerc. Advertiser 23 July 4/2  				Two Telegraph Coaches will leave Albany every day at half-past 10, A.M...and arrive at Rochester in 44 hours. 2009    J. Myerson Lost Child 159  				The next morning they all get up at half past four and set off by telegraph coach for Carrow Abbey.   telegraph cock  n. now rare a self-closing stopcock that resembles a telegraph key. ΚΠ 1877    Illustr. Price-list W. C. Duyckinck 188  				Plated Telegraph Cocks, each..$2 50. 1902    Metal Worker 12 Apr. 42/1  				The spindles [were] fitted with levers riding on the caps like the ordinary telegraph cock. 1947    Louisville & Nashville Employes' Mag. Jan. 16/3  				Substitution of plain brass bibb cock for spring handle telegraph cock for caboose coolers and mail apartment cars.   telegraph code  n. now historical a system of visual signals, electrical signals, etc., used to encode messages for transmission by telegraph; esp. = Morse code n. at Morse n.3 2c. ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > telegraphy or telephony > telegraphy > 			[noun]		 > telegraphic message > code telegraph code1828 1828    Naval & Mil. Mag. Dec. 517 		(note)	  				Sir Home Popham was not the original inventor of the Telegraph code. 1885    List of Subscribers Exchange Syst. 		(United Telephone Co.)	 		(ed. 6)	 231  				Universal Translations Institute,..Specialities:..patent specifications, telegraph codes. 1949    Pop. Sci. Monthly Dec. 30/2 		(advt.)	  				New amazing Telegraph Code Practice Set. 2014    Dominion Post 		(Wellington, N.Z.)	 		(Nexis)	 16 Apr. 12  				Symbols like ‘#’ are remnants of old telegraph codes.   telegraph dial  n. now chiefly historical a dial used to indicate a character or code on any of various types of telegraph; (in later use) esp. a dial on a ship's telegraph used to communicate between the bridge and the engine room (see sense  1d). ΚΠ 1842    W. F. Cooke Telegr. Railways 24  				The signals might be a counterpart of the Telegraph dials. 1902    J. Conrad Typhoon xix. 146  				The three pairs of eyes flew up to the telegraph dial to see the hand dart upwards from ‘Full’ to ‘Stop’ as if snatched by a devil. 2011    A. Wolf Watch ends Night 96  				Three polished telegraph dials stand waist high.   telegraph editor  n. U.S. (now historical) a person on the staff of a newspaper who edits news received by telegraph. ΘΚΠ society > communication > journalism > journalist > editor of journal or newspaper > 			[noun]		 > other types of journal or newspaper editor telegraph editor1816 editor1837 managing editor1837 sporting editor1857 news editor1868 day editor1869 art editor1871 guest editor1925 1816    J. Kortz tr.  U.-B. von G. Woful Hist. Eudoxia vi. 65  				One can—on an onion-skin paper—or ‘flimsy’ the telegraph editors call it. 1923    G. C. Bastian Editing Day's News 9  				Inside the News Room..[we find the] Managing Editor..City Editor..Telegraph Editor [etc.]. 1981    N.Y. Times 15 June  a20/3  				The telegraph editors of our [sc. the Associated Press's] member papers take our word for it and put it in print. 2012    S. Powell 100 Amer. Crime Writers xxxvi. 122  				Futrelle was working as telegraph editor for the New York Herald when the Spanish-American War broke out in 1898.   telegraph form  n. a paper form printed with spaces in which the words of a telegram are to be written for dispatch. ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > telegraphy or telephony > telegraphy > 			[noun]		 > telegraphic message > telegraph form telegraph form1859 telegraph blank1865 message form1900 1859    Spectator 26 Mar. 352/1  				A waiting-room furnished with newspapers and writing materials,..and where telegraph forms are kept for general use. 1918    P. B. Kyne Valley of Giants xxvi. 276  				‘Read this,’ Henry urged, and thrust a yellow telegraph-form under the Mayor's nose. 2014    New Statesman 		(Nexis)	 14 Apr.  				Matisse was waiting..in the post office, thinking about his mother, whom he drew on a telegraph form without thinking.   telegraph key  n. now historical a small hand-operated lever or other device in a telegraphic transmitter, used to alternately make and break the circuit; cf. key n.1 20. ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > telegraphy or telephony > telegraphy > telegraph > 			[noun]		 > transmitter > key telegraph key1848 Morse key1858 tapper1876 1848    N. Amer. & U.S. Gaz. 16 Dec.  				The hours, minutes and seconds, may be registered..by striking on the telegraph key at the instant of any occurrence. 1920    S. Lewis Main St. xix. 235  				Awake at three in the morning, alone in a room hectic with clatter of the telegraph key. 2014    J. Bryden Fighting to Lose iii. 70  				The German army signals personnel who trained Owens would have known instantly that it was not he who was on the telegraph key.   telegraph plant  n. a tropical Asian shrub,  Codariocalyx motorius (formerly  Desmodium gyrans) (family  Fabaceae), remarkable for the spontaneous movements of its leaflets, reminiscent of signalling; also called moving plant, semaphore plant. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > non-British plants or herbs > 			[noun]		 > Asian or Indian moving plant1787 elephant's foot1789 Indian lettuce1791 Sonerila1846 telegraph plant1856 whirling plant1866 mitsuba1890 1856    Horticulturalist May 243  				It is the Desmodium gyrans, usually called the Moving Plant, and, in Bengal, the Telegraph Plant. 1942    Pop. Sci. Apr. 113/2  				Leaves of the telegraph plant, Desmodium gyrans, especially the two small ones on each shoot, rise and fall briskly and even sweep more or less in a circle! 2012    A. Johnsson et al.  in  A. Volkov Plant Electrophysiol. iv. 86  				The plant..is popularly known as ‘The Telegraph Plant’ (or the ‘semaphore plant’) because of the typical movements of its leaflets.   telegraph pole  n. 		 (a) the upright post of a semaphore signalling apparatus; = telegraph post n. (b)   (now historical and rare);		 (b) one of a series of tall (often wooden) poles or masts used to carry telegraph wires or (in later use) telephone lines, power lines, and other utility cables above the ground; = telegraph post n. (c). ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > telegraphy or telephony > 			[noun]		 > pole telegraph post1799 telegraph pole1808 telephone pole1879 1808    S. T. Coleridge Notebks. 		(1973)	 III. 3384  				We turned round immediately & came back to the Telegraph-pole again. 1851    H. D. Thoreau Jrnl. 12 Sept. 		(1992)	 IV. 76  				I instantly sat down on a stone at the foot of the telegraph pole—& attended to the communication. 1884    J. Tait Mind in Matter 54  				The brain and nerves are as callous as a telegraph-pole. 1937    W. Lewis Revenge for Love  vii. vi. 393  				Trees, rocks, and telegraph-poles stood up dizzily before her and crashed down behind. 1985    D. Conner Canada: Building our Nation  iii. viii. 237  				My job was to dig holes five feet (1.5 m) deep for the telegraph poles. 2014    Guardian 31 July 26/4  				BT's..system brings fibre-optic cables from the local telephone exchange to the street, where a small box will be attached to a telegraph pole.   telegraph post  n. 		 †(a) a position at which a semaphore signalling apparatus is located (obsolete);		 (b) the upright post of a semaphore; = telegraph pole n. (a)   (now historical and rare);		 (c) a pole or mast used to carry telegraph or (in later use) other utility cables; = telegraph pole n. (b). ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > telegraphy or telephony > 			[noun]		 > pole telegraph post1799 telegraph pole1808 telephone pole1879 1799    Naval Chron. 1 537  				The signal for the enemy's fleet being out in force has been flying at the Telegraph Post, Maker Heights, since day-break, to alarm the different signal posts on the coast. 1810    Edinb. Med. & Surg. Jrnl. 6 421  				On the 15th, however, two men came from the telegraph post at Archi, near Melazzo, which had always been deemed an unhealthy spot. 1811    Pilot 26 Apr.  				Part of a telegraphic dispatch was received there [sc. Lisbon], by means of signal telegraph posts erected on the high Sierras. 1821    Courier 1 Jan.  				St. Helena..is fortified all round, and numerous telegraph posts are planted, wereby [sic] vessels are descried 90 miles distant. 1845    N.-Y. Daily Tribune 25 July 2/6  				The Telegraph Posts are to be forty feet high through Broadway, and handsomely painted. 1851    H. D. Thoreau Jrnl. 30 Sept. 		(1992)	 IV. 112  				Methinks these telegraph posts should bear a great price with musical instrument makers. 1901    Wide World Mag. 6 449/2  				I saw the vagrant telegraph-posts trailing along the horizon like a row of match-sticks. 1950    D. Thomas Let. 10 Jan. 		(1987)	 741  				Just outside Bristol, he drove his car into a telegraph post and buckled it, which I hope drove his Mother mad. 2015    Dorset Echo 		(Nexis)	 9 Feb.  				We have got telegraph posts every 100 yards. We are used to seeing these things.   telegraph reel  n. chiefly U.S. (now historical and rare) 		 (a) a reel on which the paper record of a printing telegraph is wound; (by extension) the paper record itself;		 (b) a reel on which telegraph wire is wound to facilitate its laying or installation. ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > telegraphy or telephony > telegraphy > telegraph > 			[noun]		 > types of > recording telegraphs > parts of telegraph reel1851 reel1890 1851    Watertown 		(Wisconsin)	 Chron. 1 Oct.  				His paper works upon a reel, and is continuous, like the telegraph reel. 1858    U.S. Patent 21,634  				A transverse section of the telegraph-reel, showing the cable wound upon it. 1877    U.S. Patent 198,239 2/1  				The ribboned paper to be printed and punched will be cut in coils in the shape usually adopted for telegraph-reel paper. 1904    Outlook 25 June 456/1  				Guns, ammunition, bridge, telegraph reels, signal service,..and every manner of food supply, move on eternally toward the north. 1915    Naval Rev. 3 626  				An inspection of the telegraph reel showed that the stationmaster had been doing his duty up to the very moment of surrender. 1964    L. Sims Thaddeus Lowe xi. 108  				Thaddeus could see the telegraph reel unwinding slowly and smoothly, paying out the precious wire.   telegraph register  n. a telegraphic receiver, or part of one, which produces a physical record of the messages received, typically on a ribbon of paper. ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > telegraphy or telephony > telegraphy > telegraph > 			[noun]		 > types of > recording telegraphs telegraph register1845 Morse1867 recorder1867 nicker1871 ink-writer1876 inker1882 ticker1883 news ticker1887 tape-machine1891 synchronograph1897 tape-ticker1904 undulator1910 reperforator1913 1845    Electr. Mag. Oct. 98  				The telegraph register strikes three copies of each character..by means of three points. 1911    Official Proc. St. Louis Railway Club 14 July 37  				I would watch eagerly for the reception of a telegram.., which would be accompanied by the buzzing noise of the telegraph register. 2007    L. Sonneborn Electric Light ii. 21  				Using pieces from several discarded telegraph registers, he crafted a new device.   telegraph signal  n. a signal made by telegraph. ΚΠ 1797    Parl. Reg. 1797–1802 III. 80  				It neither arose from..a misunderstanding..nor from a confusion of the Telegraph signals. 1878    Capital & Labour 5 June 363/2  				In that patent he [sc. Edison] describes a means of recording ordinary telegraph signals by a chisel-shaped stylus indenting a sheet of paper. 2014    Age 		(Melbourne)	 		(Nexis)	 20 Feb. 12  				Every hour it emitted a telegraph signal to suburban stations, synchronising all the clocks. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2016; most recently modified version published online June 2022). telegraphv. 1.   a.  intransitive. To convey information, a message, etc., by a gesture, facial expression, appearance, or other sign or signal. Frequently with to. Cf. telegraph n. 1c   and (with later use) telegraph n. 3c. ΚΠ 1799    European Mag. & London Rev. Nov. 305/2  				To us it [sc. a mountain] telegraphed with favourable omen, as we distinctly saw its summit canopied with etherial blue. 1818    ‘T. Brown’ Brighton I. 230  				They nod and telegraph to their favourites. 1888    J. W. Burgon Lives Twelve Good Men II. v. 63  				He telegraphed to me (I was in the area) to come up to him. 1914    National Geographic June 663/2  				The eye telegraphs to the brain and the brain to the hand. 1989    R. C. Wilson Gypsies 		(1990)	 157  				Aunt Laura nodded once solemnly, telegraphing to him that this was important, he had better clear off. 2012    J. Danielian  & P. Gianotti Listening with Purpose viii. 250  				You are telegraphing to them early on in the therapy that passive rescue is not what the therapy process is about.  b.  transitive. To convey information, a message, etc., to (a person) by a gesture, expression, or other sign or signal. ΚΠ 1842    S. Lover Handy Andy viii  				Tom Durfy..began telegraphing Biddy, who..had shoved herself well before the door. 1870    G. P. Belden Belden, White Chief x. 107  				The Indians send their signals very intelligently and seldom make mistakes in telegraphing each other by these silent monitors. 1919    I. E. Mackay Mist Morning ii. 189  				The brothers telegraphed each other by their favourite method of look and gesture. 2007    N. L. Macht Connie Mack 633  				His infielders constantly telegraphed each other, passing along the catcher's signs and relaying them to the outfielders.  c.  transitive. To convey (information, a message, etc.) by a gesture, expression, or other sign or signal. ΚΠ 1844    A. Smith Adventures Mr. Ledbury I. xiii. 173  				Emma telegraphed a nod of assent. 1880    C. de Chatelain Man of Many Daughters lxviii. 444  				Alternately striving to catch a glimpse of Flora..and telegraphing jokes to the younger branches of the family. 1885    Harper's Mag. Mar. 636/2  				The eye..telegraphs the outline..to the cells in the cortex. 1912    C. Mathewson  & J. N. Wheeler Pitching in Pinch vii. 160  				You are telegraphing the signs to the batters by moving around before the pitcher throws the ball. 1994    E. Caplin Al Capp Remembered 92  				Alfred was telegraphing his restlessness; his smile had frozen into a disquieting grimace. 2003    N.Y. Mag. 14 July 53/1  				Most wine geeks of my acquaintance tend to telegraph their views silently, like bad poker players.  2.  Now chiefly historical.  a.  transitive. To send, transmit, or announce (news, a message, etc.) by telegraph (telegraph n. 1a,  3a). Often with clause or direct speech as object; also with the recipient as indirect object. ΘΚΠ society > communication > indication > signalling > signal (something)			[verb (transitive)]		 whease1602 signal1800 telegraph1806 semaphore1838 message1886 society > communication > indication > signalling > signal (something)			[verb (transitive)]		 > send telegram or telegraph telegraph1806 telegram1860 society > communication > telecommunication > telegraphy or telephony > telegraphy > telegraph a message			[verb (transitive)]		 telegraph1806 flash1847 retelegraph1848 wire1859 telegram1864 cable1871 1806    Morning Post 25 Mar.  				I therefore telegraphed the squadron, that the principal object of attack would be the Admiral and his seconds. 1828    W. P. Cumby Let. 20 Mar. in  Notes & Queries 		(1884)	 5 Apr. 262  				Seeing the Admiral telegraph to Captain Blackwood..‘I rely on your keeping sight of the Enemy through the night’. 1888    R. Hart Let. 11 Mar. in  J. K. Fairbank et al.  I. G. in Peking 		(1975)	 I. 695  				Rumour says Kaiser Wilhelm is dead:—if true, I wonder you did not telegraph it. 1924    F. M. Ford Some do Not  i. ii. 44  				On Monday I shall telegraph: ‘Righto’ and nothing else. 2015    J. Chiavereni Mrs. Grant & Madame Jule 		(2016)	 224  				Ulys telegraphed that Frederick should immediately escort Julia and the children to visit him at City Point.  b.  intransitive. To signal or communicate by telegraph; spec. (esp. in later use) to send a telegram. ΘΚΠ society > communication > indication > signalling > make signals			[verb (intransitive)]		 > by means of telegraph telegraph1807 society > communication > telecommunication > telegraphy or telephony > telegraphy > telegraph			[verb (intransitive)]		 telegraph1807 wire1859 cable1871 telegram1876 cablegraph1887 marconigraph1902 1807    Bury & Norwich Post 16 Sept. 2/1  				The Staunch telegraphed to say I was wanted on shore. 1831    E. J. Trelawny Adventures Younger Son I. 253  				We saw the frigate hoist the recal signal.., and telegraph to her companion. 1858    C. Dickens Let. 22 Oct. 		(1995)	 VIII. 685  				We have telegraphed to know. 1870    M. Bridgman Robert Lynne II. ix. 181  				I should like Charles telegraphed for. 1905    Motor Boat 		(N.Y.)	 25 June 14/1  				We telegraphed and telephoned, and waited, and hunted at all the different hotels in Syracuse, and telegraphed and telephoned some more. 1983    G. W. Canfield Sarah Winnemucca xiii. 135  				I telegraphed and the agent telegraphed for supplies, but word came that no appropriation had been made. 2008    Wilson Q. Autumn 15/2  				The printers of your book have to telegraph to the mill for a carload of paper for a new edition.  c.  transitive. To signal or send a message to (a person) by telegraph; (also) to summon by a telegram. ΘΚΠ society > communication > indication > signalling > signal (something)			[verb (transitive)]		 > signal to (a person) signal1805 telegraph1808 signalize1874 1808    Morning Post 7 Mar.  				He merely telegraphed the garrison. 1810    J. W. Maurice Let. 3 Dec. in  Naval Chron. 		(1811)	 25 218  				The..gun-brig was telegraphed to send a boat. 1891    F. W. Robinson Her Love & his Life  vii. v  				Felix has been telegraphed to town. 1973    R. Terrill R. H. Tawney & his Times  i. iii. 82  				During the war, Tawney heard of working-class friends with no place to live, and telegraphed them to come to Rose Cottage. 2010    M. Broderick Triumvirate xliii. 459  				Pennsylvania Railroad president Alexander J. Cassatt telegraphed McKim to come to see him in Philadelphia.  3.  ΚΠ 1825    C. M. Westmacott Eng. Spy I. 167  				I have..always stuck up for my college and never telegraph'd the big wigs.  b.  transitive. Australian colloquial. To pass on (information, esp. about police movements) by bush telegraph. Now rare. ΘΚΠ society > communication > information > informing on or against > inform on or against			[verb (transitive)]		 > bush telegraph telegraph1878 1878    Australasian Sketcher 23 Nov. 135/2  				The object of the expedition leaked out, and, no doubt, was rapidly telegraphed across the bush to Edward Kelly. 1880    Victorian Rev. 		(Melbourne)	 Jan. 428  				News of the movements of the troopers were ‘telegraphed’ to them by their confederates. 1928    Blackwood's Mag. Oct. 549/1  				It is seldom indeed that a safari passes through the bush without some news of it being ‘telegraphed’ ahead. 1937    M. Terry Sand & Sun 80  				We had been observed on the hilltop and the news was being telegraphed through the bush—a mulga wire. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > cricket > umpiring and scoring > umpire and score			[verb (transitive)]		 > exhibit score on scoreboard telegraph1860 1860    Bell's Life in London 3 June 7/6  				The seventh wicket (Clarke's) had caused 50 to be telegraphed. 1895    Westm. Gaz. 9 May 5/3  				The play was again spirited, and in less than ten minutes 200 was telegraphed. 1913    Manitoba Free Press 18 Aug. 6/4  				Twenty runs were telegraphed as a result of 8 overs in 26 minutes.  5.   a.  transitive. Sport (originally Boxing). To initiate (a punch, throw, move, etc.) in a way that makes one's intention obvious. Also in figurative contexts. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of play, actions, or postures > 			[verb (transitive)]		 > other actions or types of play outshoot1545 football1599 pitch1717 make1819 to warm up1868 to draw out1893 bench1898 foot1900 cover1907 cannonball1911 telegraph1913 unsight1923 snap1951 to sit out1955 pike1956 to sit down1956 wrong-foot1960 blindside1968 sit1977 1913    Daily Commonw. 		(Fond du Lac, Wisconsin)	 8 July 7/1  				Pelkey has improved wonderfully of late, and has developed a style that completely puzzles his opponent. He no longer telegraphs a blow. 1940    N.Y. Times 27 Oct.  v. 6/4  				Finneran, who dropped back every time Scott telegraphed his pass by fading far to he rear, made the first interception. 1945    E. Nichols Hunky Johnny 68  				He telegraphs every curve he throws. 1969    Wall St. Jrnl. 1 Dec. 14/1  				The company won't disclose the nature of the new products now, Mr. Arneson said. ‘We're not about to telegraph our punches.’ 1989    B. Courtenay Power of One xii. 251  				I..managed two more good punches to the spot under his heart when he telegraphed another right cross. 2015    Daily Tel. 		(Nexis)	 3 June (Sports section) 11  				Guys who are not good batsmen knew where the ball was going to be aimed... Ball after ball was telegraphed.  b.  transitive. In extended use. To give an obvious hint or premature indication of (something to come). Also with that-clause as object. ΘΚΠ society > communication > indication > 			[verb (transitive)]		 > plainly or obviously shriek1920 shout1931 shriek1944 telegraph1952 1952    N.Y. Times 13 Aug. 		(Late City ed.)	 29/5  				Inevitably the pay-off gag was ‘telegraphed’ to the audience far in advance. 1968    Punch 16 Oct. 558/3  				The exasperating way music [in a film] sometimes not only over-emphasises but even telegraphs effects. 1986    N.Y. Times 9 Apr.  d17/2  				The strength of Treasury bill futures is telegraphing that there's an imminent cut in the discount rate coming. 2004    Chicago Tribune 		(Midwest ed.)	 21 May  ii. 3/4  				The projected titles sometimes telegraphed the jokes before the performers actually sang them. Derivatives  ˌtelegraˈphee  n. now rare a person to whom a telegram is sent. ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > telegraphy or telephony > telegraphy > 			[noun]		 > recipient of telegram telegraphee1875 1875    Musical World 18 Dec. 853/1  				Whenever the Pope has blessed a sick person by telegraph, he has always been unfortunate enough to have the telegraphee die forthwith. 1895    Westm. Gaz. 4 Nov. 2/3  				A decision of Lord Coleridge's that there was no property in a special telegram, though it may have cost the telegraphee a thousand pounds to procure. 1964    E. Sevareid This is Eric Sevareid ix. 243  				If you put a check mark opposite certain verses, their phone operators will sing the sweet song to the telegraphee. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2016; most recently modified version published online March 2022). <  | 
	
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