It was an early form of electronic communication where Morse Code was used to send messages by wire.
John Emmet O'Brien has written: 'Telegraphing in battle' -- subject(s): Accessible book, History, Military telegraph, Personal narratives, United States Civil War, 1861-1865
That was Mr. Samuel Morse himself, who proved that it could be done by submerging a cable in the NY harbour and telegraphing through it in 1842. In 1851, the first commercial submarine cable was laid on the bottom of the English Channel by the Anglo-French Telegraph Company, connecting France and the UK.
This may refer to when a person is giving facial cues or other signs that they are nervous and they "telegraph" their emotions. It can also apply to any emotion that is revealed by watching the person's body language. While job interviews can make a person uneasy, the best thing to do is just be yourself and answer the questions honestly, to the best of your ability.
Reaction... if trained properly. Reaction is instinct and so it happens without conscious thought. This means many milliseconds are saved. (Think of how if you accidently touch something hot your body reacts and pulls your hand away without even thinking.) Action requires conscious thought, and many people end up telegraphing what they will do next with their eyes or other body movement.
Telegraphing his motion means inadvertently giving advance notice or indication of the movement he is about to make, making it easier for others to predict or anticipate his actions. It stems from the historical communication method of telegraphy, where messages were sent over a distance, allowing the recipient to anticipate the message before receiving it. In a physical context, it can refer to unintentionally signaling one's intentions before actually executing them.
Guys choose to write such profiles for several reasons: 1. To signal that they really don't want a relationship, just sex. 2. Because they think it is expected of them or that women want that. 3. They may be desperate and think telegraphing their sexual interests will increase their odds of getting sex. Actually, it may do the opposite, at least when it comes to decent women.
Well, judging by his Super Bowl interview with Matt Lauer where he actively complained about the system set up by the Founding and it's difficulty in bringing about great change ( the point). Combined with his admiration for Europe, whose countries adopt a new Constitution on an average of every 19 years and the only thing keeping him in check being the election.... IF he's reelected, then he's telegraphing that he wants a new one and will probably pursue one in his second term.
An electronic transmission is anything sent electronically like a fax, or e-mail. HIPPA deals with confidentiality of patient records, and HIPPA addresses electronic transmissions because they don't want their rules to only apply to paper copies of medical records, they want them to apply to all forms of medical records and medical communication.
Without getting into too much detail, the lead human character is arrested and hauled off to prison, and the dog howls and pines. The title is derived from the name of the Dog, possibly an allusion to a telegraphic sounder, but dogs do not click out dots and dashes. Maybe telegraphing the punches- the events of the novel. it is a downer and ends on a tragic note.
Several elements of the US Civil War are used to argue that is was the first so-called modern war. The first element was the scale of the conflict. Both sides mobilized large segments of their populations, sometimes via conscription . The second element was industrial mobilization. Fielding massive armies requires large quantities of supplies and equipment. Northern industry expanded to meet these demands, the South attempted to do also, but its lack of an industrial base caused them to seek help from overseas. The third element is often cited by many and is accurate, when accompanied by the first two elements. This included the use of railroads, steam engines, armored ships with turrets, extensive reliance on modern telegraphing, newer rifles, observation balloons, and trench warfare.
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The practical electric telegraph system was invented by Samuel Morse in 1837. After Joseph Henry discovered electric induction in 1831, enabling further development in electrical telegraphy, the first practical telegraph was invented by Dr. David Alter of Elderton, Pennsylvania, in 1836. It wasn't until 1837 that Samuel F.B. Morse would successfully invent the electric telegraph which would become commercially successful. He did so with the help of financier and assistant Alfred Vail. The Morse-Vail Code would become the international standard mode of communication on the high seas, until Morse Code as well as the S.O.S. distress call were disbanded in 1999. One reason for the success of Morse's system was that it could be operated over a single wire of lesser quality, and over a long distance. Telegraph wires were strung along railroad lines in many areas. The telegraph was invented by Samuel Morse in the late 1830's. I am not certain why Wikipedia and other sources discount the Morse invention, which is the practical form that every person thinks of when the word telegraph is mentioned. The fact that W.F. Cooke set up a London electric security relay system (and that Dr. Alter had a telegraph in his yard) does not nearly have the value as Morse's system (financed by Vail), that enabled mass communication on a scale never seen to that point in time, both nationally and internationally.