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Answer for the clue "Telegraph developer ", 5 letters:
morse

Alternative clues for the word morse

Word definitions for morse in dictionaries

Gazetteer Word definitions in Gazetteer
Population (2000): 172 Housing Units (2000): 63 Land area (2000): 0.545058 sq. miles (1.411693 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 0.545058 sq. miles (1.411693 sq. km) FIPS code: 49440 Located within: Texas ...

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Morse may refer to: Morse code , a method of coding messages into long and short beeps Morse, an archaic word for the clasp of a cope .

Usage examples of morse.

Morse decided to look at his notes, and quickly corrected the antepenultimate word.

Morse found himself quietly re-appraising the man who first beached and then readjusted his vast bulk in an armchair, with a series of expiratory grunts.

For the fourteenth time Morse found himself re-appraising the quirkily contradictory character that was Chief Superintendent Strange.

Pam Rude Robinson, Kimi Morse Reist, Heather Hutton Kuyk, Jane Johnson Ricker, Joan Craft Laoulidi, Tracy Palmer Berns, Kimberly Burke Sweetman and Melissa Jurgens.

Holding a pigskin glove in his left hand, he nodded to Scrimshaw and extended his hand to Morse.

Morse code, and planets, and even Therbligs, painted all over the walls of their house, either.

Erie County Detention Center at least once a week, after dark, so that Verrie could flash the car headlights as they approached the grim building, eliciting from its interior, not always or clearly, an answering sequence of flashes like Morse code, what was probably a hand-held mirror inside one of the barred windows.

Morse Hudson is the purveyor of busts in that part of London, and these three were the only ones which had been in his shop for years.

Morse to witness a test of his newly invented electric telegraph, a connection for which had been set up between Baltimore and Washing Dolley in a Matthew Brady daguerreotype of about 1848, and her home on Lafayette Square.

Morse listening to the testimony of General Taylor at the Fulbright Hearings, February 1966.

When he and Janice bought the place in 1984 you could still see from their balcony snatches of the Gulf, a dead-level edge to the world over the rooftops and broken between the raw new towers like the dots and dashes of Morse code, and in their excitement they bought a telescope and tripod at a nautical shop at the mall a mile down Pindo Palm Boulevard.

Professor Henry realized, in common with Morse and others, that if the current were to be conducted over long wires for considerable distances it would become so weak that it would not operate a receiver.

By 1837 Morse had completed a model, had improved his apparatus, had secured stronger batteries and longer wires, and mastered the use of the relay.

While working and waiting and saving, Morse conceived the idea of laying telegraph wires beneath the water.

North Korean military would read the Morse code over the communications channels rather than tap it out with a key.