The English word that comes from the Greek word "grapho" is "telegraph."
The word "tele" is Greek for "at a distance" or "to a distance," and the word "graph" is Greek for "to write," together translating as "to write at a distance." The word "television" uses the Latin word "visio," meaning "to see," along with the Greek word "tele," which together translates as "to see at a distance."
tele
I'm going to send this telegraph to Joe!
The word 'telegraph' is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a device for sending signals over wires, a word for a thing.The word 'telegraph' is also a verb, meaning to send a message using such a device.
Graphein (γραφειν) is the Greek word for 'to draw/write', and is the basis for the English prefix and suffix 'graph', as in graphics, graphologist, graphite, geography, photograph, telegraph etc.
telegraph was an old machine invented by Thomas Edison, to talk to each other.
telegraphs
wire
wire
The answer is "daily" as in the neswpaper daily telegraph
Communication by telegraph has been outmoded by wireless communication methods.