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telephone+receiver

  • 121 fuera de alcance

    = beyond reach, out of range
    Ex. Excellence is certainly a superlative and may appear to be forever just beyond reach.
    Ex. Telephone companies put hundreds of cellular antennas in metropolitan areas so you are theoretically never out of range of a receiver.
    * * *
    = beyond reach, out of range

    Ex: Excellence is certainly a superlative and may appear to be forever just beyond reach.

    Ex: Telephone companies put hundreds of cellular antennas in metropolitan areas so you are theoretically never out of range of a receiver.

    Spanish-English dictionary > fuera de alcance

  • 122 fuera de cobertura

    Ex. Telephone companies put hundreds of cellular antennas in metropolitan areas so you are theoretically never out of range of a receiver.
    * * *

    Ex: Telephone companies put hundreds of cellular antennas in metropolitan areas so you are theoretically never out of range of a receiver.

    Spanish-English dictionary > fuera de cobertura

  • 123 fuera de secuencia

    Ex. Telephone companies put hundreds of cellular antennas in metropolitan areas so you are theoretically never out of range of a receiver.
    * * *

    Ex: Telephone companies put hundreds of cellular antennas in metropolitan areas so you are theoretically never out of range of a receiver.

    Spanish-English dictionary > fuera de secuencia

  • 124 teléfono fijo

    m.
    landline, land line.
    * * *
    (n.) = fixed telephone, landline [land line]
    Ex. In 1998, for the first time worldwide the number of new mobile telephones exceeded the number of new fixed telephones.
    Ex. A landline is also used to increase the security of communications, as it cannot be intercepted by a receiver without physical access to the line.
    * * *
    (n.) = fixed telephone, landline [land line]

    Ex: In 1998, for the first time worldwide the number of new mobile telephones exceeded the number of new fixed telephones.

    Ex: A landline is also used to increase the security of communications, as it cannot be intercepted by a receiver without physical access to the line.

    * * *
    fixed phone

    Spanish-English dictionary > teléfono fijo

  • 125 transmisor receptor

    (n.) = transceiver
    Ex. A transmitter and a receiver (or 2 transceivers) are required to convert the printed document into electrical signals to be sent over telephone lines.
    * * *

    Ex: A transmitter and a receiver (or 2 transceivers) are required to convert the printed document into electrical signals to be sent over telephone lines.

    Spanish-English dictionary > transmisor receptor

  • 126 ahize

    n. handset, telephone with the receiver and transmitter combined in a single handheld unit, receiver, part of a telephone that converts signals into sound

    Turkish-English dictionary > ahize

  • 127 Bell, Alexander Graham

    SUBJECT AREA: Telecommunications
    [br]
    b. 3 March 1847 Edinburgh, Scotland
    d. 3 August 1922 Beinn Bhreagh, Baddeck, Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, Canada
    [br]
    Scottish/American inventor of the telephone.
    [br]
    Bell's grandfather was a professor of elocution in London and his father an authority on the physiology of the voice and on elocution; Bell was to follow in their footsteps. He was educated in Edinburgh, leaving school at 13. In 1863 he went to Elgin, Morayshire, as a pupil teacher in elocution, with a year's break to study at Edinburgh University; it was in 1865, while still in Elgin, that he first conceived the idea of the electrical transmission of speech. He went as a master to Somersetshire College, Bath (now in Avon), and in 1867 he moved to London to assist his father, who had taken up the grandfather's work in elocution. In the same year, he matriculated at London University, studying anatomy and physiology, and also began teaching the deaf. He continued to pursue the studies that were to lead to the invention of the telephone. At this time he read Helmholtz's The Sensations of Tone, an important work on the theory of sound that was to exert a considerable influence on him.
    In 1870 he accompanied his parents when they emigrated to Canada. His work for the deaf gained fame in both Canada and the USA, and in 1873 he was apponted professor of vocal physiology and the mechanics of speech at Boston University, Massachusetts. There, he continued to work on his theory that sound wave vibrations could be converted into a fluctuating electric current, be sent along a wire and then be converted back into sound waves by means of a receiver. He approached the problem from the background of the theory of sound and voice production rather than from that of electrical science, and by 1875 he had succeeded in constructing a rough model. On 7 March 1876 Bell spoke the famous command to his assistant, "Mr Watson, come here, I want you": this was the first time a human voice had been transmitted along a wire. Only three days earlier, Bell's first patent for the telephone had been granted. Almost simultaneously, but quite independently, Elisha Gray had achieved a similar result. After a period of litigation, the US Supreme Court awarded Bell priority, although Gray's device was technically superior.
    In 1877, three years after becoming a naturalized US citizen, Bell married the deaf daughter of his first backer. In August of that year, they travelled to Europe to combine a honeymoon with promotion of the telephone. Bell's patent was possibly the most valuable ever issued, for it gave birth to what later became the world's largest private service organization, the Bell Telephone Company.
    Bell had other scientific and technological interests: he made improvements in telegraphy and in Edison's gramophone, and he also developed a keen interest in aeronautics, working on Curtiss's flying machine. Bell founded the celebrated periodical Science.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Legion of Honour; Hughes Medal, Royal Society, 1913.
    Further Reading
    Obituary, 7 August 1922, The Times. Dictionary of American Biography.
    R.Burlingame, 1964, Out of Silence into Sound, London: Macmillan.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Bell, Alexander Graham

  • 128 конденсаторный телефон

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > конденсаторный телефон

См. также в других словарях:

  • telephone receiver — ☆ telephone receiver n. see RECEIVER (sense 2b) …   English World dictionary

  • telephone receiver — noun earphone that converts electrical signals into sounds • Syn: ↑receiver • Hypernyms: ↑earphone, ↑earpiece, ↑headphone, ↑phone • Hyponyms: ↑headset …   Useful english dictionary

  • telephone receiver — handset, part of a telephone equipped with a speaker and microphone and used to conduct telephone conversations …   English contemporary dictionary

  • telephone receiver — n. see receiver1 2 * * * see receiver 1 2 …   Combinatory dictionary

  • telephone receiver — a device, as in a telephone, that converts changes in an electric current into sound. [1905 10] * * * …   Universalium

  • telephone receiver —    That part of a telephone handset which converts electrical energy into sound …   IT glossary of terms, acronyms and abbreviations

  • receiver — n. part of a telephone 1) to pick up the receiver 2) to hang up, put down, replace a receiver 3) a telephone receiver radio 4) a shortwave receiver one who catches a forward pass (Am. football) 5) to hit; spot a receiver (to spot a receiver down… …   Combinatory dictionary

  • receiver — Synonyms and related words: Christian, God fearing man, TelAutography, Teletype, Teletype network, Teletyping, accepter, accountant, acquirer, addressee, audience, auditor, beholder, believer, bookkeeper, bursar, cabinet, call box, cashier,… …   Moby Thesaurus

  • telephone — Synonyms and related words: blower, buzz, call, call box, call up, carbon telephone, coin telephone, desk telephone, dial, dial telephone, extension, give a ring, handset, hang up, hold the phone, horn, listen in, make a call, mouthpiece, pay… …   Moby Thesaurus

  • telephone booth — Synonyms and related words: call box, coin telephone, desk telephone, dial telephone, extension, mouthpiece, pay station, phone, public telephone, push button telephone, receiver, telephone, telephone engineering, telephone extension, telephone… …   Moby Thesaurus

  • telephone set — noun electronic equipment that converts sound into electrical signals that can be transmitted over distances and then converts received signals back into sounds I talked to him on the telephone • Syn: ↑telephone, ↑phone • Derivationally related… …   Useful english dictionary

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