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wireless telegraphy

NOUN
  1. the use of radio to send telegraphic messages (usually by Morse code)
  2. telegraphy that uses transmission by radio rather than by wire

How To Use wireless telegraphy In A Sentence

  • From here the visitors were taken outside to the railway siding where railway trucks would deliver the raw materials and despatch the completed wireless telegraphy equipment.
  • One great difficulty was that of recruiting radio operators owing to the fact that wireless telegraphy is very little used in the commercial air services over here, which operate by means of the radio ranges, and radio telephony when within range of the control towers of the airfields. Some Aspects of the Royal Air Force Transport Command
  • Before 1920, radio was used for point-to-point wireless telegraphy.
  • His goal was to use radio waves to create a practical system of “wireless telegraphy” – or the transmission of telegraphs without the use of wires. Five People Born on April 25 | myFiveBest
  • The tube of filings through which the electric current is made to pass in wireless telegraphy is called a coherer signifying that the filings cohere or cling together under the influence of the electric waves. Marvels of Modern Science
  • Tesla's inventions and discoveries are all duly recorded—alternating current, wireless telegraphy, radio transmission. A Window Onto Comic Tedium
  • She said that the offence was introduced to deter telegraphers from interfering with messages as they tapped them out and was enshrined in law in the Wireless Telegraphy Act dating back to the turn of the 20th century.
  • At the time, this was the unsolved problem of wireless telegraphy — as it still is to-day — but Emil Gluck, in his prison cell, mastered it. THE ENEMY OF ALL THE WORLD
  • The expenditure in connection with wireless telegraphy is under the control of the Admiralty and included in its general budget. The Imperial Conference of 1907
  • A wife whose mind was oriented in the new direction effectually silenced her husband's ridicule of what he called her credulity by reminding him that when wireless telegraphy was first suggested he had exclaimed, "Ah, that, you know, is one of the things that is not possible! Four-Dimensional Vistas
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