Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
I would like to answer telegraphically some of those questions.
He talks telegraphically, using short phrases and confident deep breaths.
I will tell you telegraphically.
"We help you fight Orskis," I said, both mendaciously and telegraphically.
By the 1870s, a network of land lines and submarine communications cables had telegraphically connected all the inhabited continents.
Alexander Graham Bell was, however, the first to patent the telephone, as an "apparatus for transmitting vocal or other sounds telegraphically".
"Phosphorus recovery," explained Henry telegraphically.
Place called Buncarragh, Donegal,' he explained, telegraphically.
When she recited antiwar slogans of the 1960's, her feet telegraphically beat out their rhythms in what she called "tapagrams."
That staccato postscript reads as if some new and mighty business were imminent, for it is slung on the paper telegraphically, all the small words left out.
A solicitor pays a fee to a bank for the transfer of funds telegraphically or electronically to, or from, the solicitor's own business or client account.
Alexander Bain had transmitted images telegraphically in the 1840s but the Nipkow disk improved the encoding process.
This theme acts as the first subject of a telegraphically argued sonata form, but will also make a reappearance in the final section, although in a new form.
Quote: "He thought he could harness the new electronic technology by creating a machine with a transmitter and receiver that would send sounds telegraphically to help people hear."
"Man in his arrogance thinks himself a great work worthy [of] the interposition of a deity," Darwin wrote telegraphically in his notebook.
Bell was the first to obtain a patent, in 1876, for an "apparatus for transmitting vocal or other sounds telegraphically", after experimenting with many primitive sound transmitters and receivers.
In 1876, he filed a caveat with the U.S. Patent Office, announcing his intention to soon patent an invention that would transmit vocal sounds telegraphically.
Fortunately, though, both versions are included here, and while Mr. Hanks's director's cut is worth a fast-forward through (particularly for the way it fleshes out, albeit telegraphically, an interracial romance between two of the characters), the original is the one to watch.
These are not very hard to find in newspapers (as of the headline writer (who is not, usually, the writer of the article) is to come up with something that is a telegraphically brief inkling of the substance of the article.
Finally, when I thought the fun had gone far enough, and having about completed the special, I quietly opened the key and remarked, telegraphically, to my New York friend: 'Say, young man, change off and send with your other foot.'
"If we were to send, telegraphically, the genotype of a man, and the receiver were able to synthesize, on the basis of that, only white blood cells, he would end up with amoebalike things as well as an enormous amount of unused information.
The language of the claim is: "The method of and apparatus for transmitting vocal or other sounds telegraphically as herein described, by causing electrical undulations similar in form to the vibrations of the air accompanying the said vocal or other sounds substantially as set forth."
It derives its name from the Transatlantic Cable, a steel cable laid under the Atlantic Ocean in 1858, telegraphically linking the UK with the USA, enabling messages with currency prices to be transmitted between the London and New York Exchanges.