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English Dictionary: telephone by the DICT Development Group
4 results for telephone
From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]:
telephone
n
  1. electronic equipment that converts sound into electrical signals that can be transmitted over distances and then converts received signals back into sounds; "I talked to him on the telephone"
    Synonym(s): telephone, phone, telephone set
  2. transmitting speech at a distance
    Synonym(s): telephone, telephony
v
  1. get or try to get into communication (with someone) by telephone; "I tried to call you all night"; "Take two aspirin and call me in the morning"
    Synonym(s): call, telephone, call up, phone, ring
From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]:
   Telephone \Tel"e*phone\, n. [Gr. [?] far off + [?] sound.]
      (Physics)
      An instrument for reproducing sounds, especially articulate
      speech, at a distance.
  
      Note: The ordinary telephone consists essentially of a device
               by which currents of electricity, produced by sounds
               through the agency of certain mechanical devices and
               exactly corresponding in duration and intensity to the
               vibrations of the air which attend them, are
               transmitted to a distant station, and there, acting on
               suitable mechanism, reproduce similar sounds by
               repeating the vibrations. The necessary variations in
               the electrical currents are usually produced by means
               of a microphone attached to a thin diaphragm upon which
               the voice acts, and are intensified by means of an
               induction coil. In the magnetic telephone, or
               magneto-telephone, the diaphragm is of soft iron placed
               close to the pole of a magnet upon which is wound a
               coil of fine wire, and its vibrations produce
               corresponding vibrable currents in the wire by
               induction. The mechanical, or string, telephone is a
               device in which the voice or sound causes vibrations in
               a thin diaphragm, which are directly transmitted along
               a wire or string connecting it to a similar diaphragm
               at the remote station, thus reproducing the sound. It
               does not employ electricity.

From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]:
   Telephone \Tel"e*phone\, v. t.
      To convey or announce by telephone.

From U.S. Gazetteer (1990) [gazetteer]:
   Telephone, TX
      Zip code(s): 75488
No guarantee of accuracy or completeness!
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