Telegraph can be a noun or a verb, depending on it's usage in a given sentence.
As a noun, the word describes a process, system, or an apparatus for transmitting messages or signals to a distant place.
As a verb, it means to transmit or send a message by telegraph. -It can also mean to unwittingly indicate one's intention, such as to an opponent, or to an audience.
A telegraph is a device or system that transmits messages over a distance using a code.
He stayed seated at the telegraph all night long, waiting for messages to come over the wires
She received an urgent telegraph from her boss requesting her immediate presence at the office.
The telegraph allowed for instantaneous long-distance communication by transmitting coded messages over electrical wires.
Sure, here is an example sentence using the word "mean": "I'm not sure what you mean by that statement."
Tele- is a prefix that can mean far away or distant in distance.
Telegraph poles to stop debris
I'm going to send this telegraph to Joe!
Example of telegraph in a sentence:Yesterday I put up a telegraph pole all around the united kingdom.
With modern technology, the telegraph is being confined to history.
Bell was trying to improve the telegraph when he invented the telephone. They used the telegraph to communicate across the ocean.
telegraph was an old machine invented by Thomas Edison, to talk to each other.
Communication by telegraph has been outmoded by wireless communication methods.
tele
He stayed seated at the telegraph all night long, waiting for messages to come over the wires
She received an urgent telegraph from her boss requesting her immediate presence at the office.
I am overjoyed that telegraph had existed back in the day
telegraph was invented first...if question doesn't mean wireless telegraph