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telegraphers

n. (plural of telegrapher English)

Usage examples of "telegraphers".

The ballroom dancers below us, yes, they were also part of it, but so were the sleeping farmers and the cold and angry men gathering their weapons in Caris Yard — so, too, were the telegraphers and the ironmasters and the captains on their ships in iceberg waters.

Without aether, the wyreglowing telegraphs which thread our countryside would fall silent of the messages which telegraphers chant mind to mind to mind.

I don't know the full details, but basically we Telegraphers need the money, and Greatmaster Porrett's guild, which is the something or other of thingy and involves chemicals, has it.

Saul and all the other citizens will have been killed or imprisoned, and the Telegraphers will be flush with new money.

In London, the main watch of telegraphers would be replacing the skeleton one which had nursed England through the dream of Christmas.

So I suppose we'll need to capture a few proper telegraphers, get them up here to tell us the basic spells.

All of these influences, added together, meant that early telegraphers could send anything they wanted into the big wire, but the only thing that showed up at the other end was noise.

But now they are merely caretakers for machines that process bits about as fast as a billion telegraphers working in parallel.

Like any old-time cable station, it housed the equipment for receiving and transmitting messages as well as lodgings and support services for the telegraphers who manned it.

Not a train ran, not a telegraphic message went over the wires, for the telegraphers and railroad men had ceased work along with the rest of the population.

Among the telegraphers were Romain Rolland, George Bernard Shaw, Albert Einstein, John Galsworthy, Sinclair Lewis, and H.

The feet of the two fake telegraphers skidded a little as they worked across the sidewalk.