Matching Words
31348 ResultsBelow are the words that matched your query.
Telescoped
- verb - crush together or collapse; "In the accident, the cars telescoped"; "my hiking sticks telescope and can be put into the backpack"
- make smaller or shorter; "the novel was telescoped into a short play"
- shortened by or as if by means of parts that slide one within another or are crushed one into another; "a miracle that anyone survived in the telescoped cars"; "years that seemed telescoped like time in a dream"
Telescopes
- noun - a magnifier of images of distant objects
- crush together or collapse; "In the accident, the cars telescoped"; "my hiking sticks telescope and can be put into the backpack"
- make smaller or shorter; "the novel was telescoped into a short play"
Telescopic
- adjective - capable of discerning distant objects; "a telescopic eye"; "telescopic vision"
- having parts that slide one within another; "a telescopic antenna"; "a telescopic drinking cup"
- visible only with a telescope; "a bright star with a telescopic companion"
Telescreen
- unknown - visual display terminal
Televising
- verb - broadcast via television; "The Royal wedding was televised"
Television
- noun - a telecommunication system that transmits images of objects (stationary or moving) between distant points
- an electronic device that receives television signals and displays them on a screen; "the British call a tv set a telly"
- broadcasting visual images of stationary or moving objects; "she is a star of screen and video"; "Television is a medium because it is neither rare nor well done" - Ernie Kovacs
Teleworker
- unknown - Someone working from home
Telferages
- noun - a transportation system in which cars (telphers) are suspended from cables and operated on electricity
Telfordize
- - To furnish (a road) with a telford pavement.
Telharmony
- - An instrument for producing music (Tel*har"mo*ny []), at a distant point or points by means of alternating currents of electricity controlled by an operator who plays on a keyboard. The music is produced by a receiving instrument similar or analogous to the telephone, but not held to the ear. The pitch corresponds with frequency of alternation of current.