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How To Use Telegraph pole In A Sentence

  • The Subaru then veered across the road and hit a telegraph pole, eventually becoming lodged between the pole and a tree.
  • At first glance it looks like an ordinary telegraph pole but it's really a cunningly disguised mobile phone mast.
  • The long planks of timber fell off the truck to the left, knocking down a telegraph pole and felling telephone lines in the area.
  • From the feel of it she thought it could be a telegraph pole.
  • They are a common bird in Florida and they can be seen everywhere nesting on telegraph poles.
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  • He lost control of the car, striking a kerb, a stone wall and a telegraph pole.
  • He hit a telegraph pole with the prop and went straight into a farmhouse. FIGHTER BOYS: Saving Britain 1940
  • The telegraph poles were made of solid ice. SIGNOR MARCONI'S MAGIC BOX: The invention that sparked the radio revolution
  • Perhaps the most poignant memorial is a bunch of 26 white wooden tulips tied to a telegraph pole. The Sun
  • Then there was the adrenalin rush of racing to see one very rare bird: a fork-tailed flycatcher, perched on a telegraph pole.
  • The curlew and oystercatcher are back and the great spotted woodpeckers have chosen the oldest telegraph poles in the village for best quality drumming sounds.
  • The telegraph poles were made of solid ice. SIGNOR MARCONI'S MAGIC BOX: The invention that sparked the radio revolution
  • There was a cold furnace festooned with service pipes and otherwise nothing but cockeyed telegraph poles and loops of wire in a bare waste of ashes.
  • Shell holes, shattered doors and broken windows, telegraph poles lying about, with their hairy whiskers twisting raggedly over the veldt, farmhouses burnt to cinders, hotels that had once been smart in their way now weevilled by shrapnel -- all these things surrounded the encamped division which so brilliantly had crossed the river. South Africa and the Transvaal War, Vol. 2 (of 6) From the Commencement of the War to the Battle of Colenso, 15th Dec. 1899
  • The telegraph poles were made of solid ice. SIGNOR MARCONI'S MAGIC BOX: The invention that sparked the radio revolution
  • Perhaps the most poignant memorial is a bunch of 26 white wooden tulips tied to a telegraph pole. The Sun
  • We are thankful that thus far he has escaped permanent injury, although he does tell me he has bowled over a few telegraph poles and on one occasion had to "unload," when his machine was on fire and doing from sixty to seventy miles an hour. The Land Speed Record
  • No trees, no bluffs, no cabins, no telegraph poles, nothin '," moaned Red Bill; "nothin 'respectable enough nor big enough to swing the toes of a five-foot man clear Jan, the Unrepentant
  • He had been referring to the telegraph poles that lined the road. Times, Sunday Times
  • It describes the myriad of ways that cell phone masts have been hidden: ‘They are being disguised as chimneys, clocks, drainpipes, telegraph poles, and even weathervanes.’
  • The Code treats wires and telegraph poles in a slightly different way. Times, Sunday Times
  • One car even catapulted a telegraph pole into her house in the latest collision at the weekend.
  • I managed to duck but in the course of so doing, clipped a telegraph pole. Times, Sunday Times
  • A greater-spotted woodpecker zooms in on a telegraph pole on the lane.
  • The verdant hills and raised valleys are ideal for its commodes with ample erect telegraph poles to mark its new territorial space.
  • One car ended up in a field after skidding off the road and up a bank, narrowly missing a tree and telegraph pole.
  • He was tied to a telegraph pole in a field on the outskirts of Cork City where he was repeatedly beaten by a gang of up to five men.
  • No trees, no bluffs, no cabins, no telegraph poles, nothin '," moaned Red Bill; "nothin 'respectable enough nor big enough to swing the toes of a five-foot man clear o' the ground. JAN, THE UNREPENTANT
  • The Code treats wires and telegraph poles in a slightly different way. Times, Sunday Times
  • Trees had been uprooted, telegraph poles broken, roofs torn off, advertising hoardings smashed and lorries turned over.
  • Or you could just shorten rather than remove the side branches (think telegraph poles ) and have a supply of pea sticks for supporting perennials. Times, Sunday Times
  • Black tube steel was sourced from local foundries, together with telegraph poles and guy wires which were donated by a power supplier.
  • I managed to duck but in the course of so doing, clipped a telegraph pole. Times, Sunday Times
  • He had been referring to the telegraph poles that lined the road. Times, Sunday Times
  • He hit a telegraph pole with the prop and went straight into a farmhouse. FIGHTER BOYS: Saving Britain 1940
  • The turbine he wanted was in galvanised steel and no taller than a telegraph pole and was almost noiseless, added Mr Kershaw.
  • The truck crashed into a telegraph pole.
  • The home also lost its internet and phone connection when a nearby telegraph pole was hit by an offshoot of the bolt. Times, Sunday Times
  • She felt rigid like a telegraph pole, communicating perfectly, functioning flawlessly, but with no heart, no soul.
  • The home also lost its internet and phone connection when a nearby telegraph pole was hit by an offshoot of the bolt. Times, Sunday Times
  • Or you could just shorten rather than remove the side branches (think telegraph poles ) and have a supply of pea sticks for supporting perennials. Times, Sunday Times
  • The truck came to rest on its side in the car park, after demolishing a telegraph pole and shedding half its load of soya.
  • With no official course, no maps and, for half the race, no roads, drivers navigate by counting telegraph poles, by compass and by observing the position of the sun.

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