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1 morse
m.Morse (code).* * *1 Morse code* * *SM Morse code* * *Iadjetivo invariable Morse (before n)IImasculino Morse code* * *= morse code.Ex. However, many aphasics can continue to communicate through reading and writing, sometimes with the help of other alphabets, such as braille or morse code.* * *Iadjetivo invariable Morse (before n)IImasculino Morse code* * *= morse code.Ex: However, many aphasics can continue to communicate through reading and writing, sometimes with the help of other alphabets, such as braille or morse code.
* * *Morse ( before n)Morse code* * *
Multiple Entries:
Morse
morse
Morse m (alfabeto) morse
' Morse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
código
English:
Morse
* * *morse nmMorse (code);un mensaje en morse a Morse code message* * *morse nm: Morse code -
2 morse
morse agg. Morse: alfabeto morse, Morse code◆ s.m. Morse code: trasmettere in morse, to transmit in Morse code.* * *['mɔrs]sostantivo maschile invariabile* * *morse/'mɔrs/m.inv.(alfabeto o codice) morse Morse (code). -
3 morse
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4 morse
Morse code. -
5 morse
I.morse1 [mɔʀs]masculine noun( = animal) walrusII.morse2 [mɔʀs]masculine noun( = code) Morse (code)* * *mɔʀsnom masculin1) Zoologie walrus* * *mɔʀs nm1) ZOOLOGIE walrus2) TÉLÉCOMMUNICATIONS Morse code* * *morse nm1 Zool walrus;2 Télécom (alphabet or code) morse Morse code.[mɔrs] nom masculin2. [code] Morse (code) -
6 Morse, Samuel Finley Breeze
SUBJECT AREA: Telecommunications[br]b. 27 April 1791 Charlestown, Massachusetts, USAd. 2 April 1872 New York City, New York, USA[br]American portrait painter and inventor, b est known for his invention of the telegraph and so-called Morse code.[br]Following early education at Phillips Academy, Andover, at the age of 14 years Morse went to Yale College, where he developed interests in painting and electricity. Upon graduating in 1810 he became a clerk to a Washington publisher and a pupil of Washington Allston, a well-known American painter. The following year he travelled to Europe and entered the London studio of another American artist, Benjamin West, successfully exhibiting at the Royal Academy as well as winning a prize and medal for his sculpture. Returning to Boston and finding little success as a "historical-style" painter, he built up a thriving portrait business, moving in 1818 to Charleston, South Carolina, where three years later he established the (now defunct) South Carolina Academy of Fine Arts. In 1825 he was back in New York, but following the death of his wife and both of his parents that year, he embarked on an extended tour of European art galleries. In 1832, on the boat back to America, he met Charles T.Jackson, who told him of the discovery of the electromagnet and fired his interest in telegraphy to the extent that Morse immediately began to make suggestions for electrical communications and, apparently, devised a form of printing telegraph. Although he returned to his painting and in 1835 was appointed the first Professor of the Literature of Art and Design at the University of New York City, he began to spend more and more time experimenting in telegraphy. In 1836 he invented a relay as a means of extending the cable distance over which telegraph signals could be sent. At this time he became acquainted with Alfred Vail, and the following year, when the US government published the requirements for a national telegraph service, they set out to produce a workable system, with finance provided by Vail's father (who, usefully, owned an ironworks). A patent was filed on 6 October 1837 and a successful demonstration using the so-called Morse code was given on 6 January 1838; the work was, in fact, almost certainly largely that of Vail. As a result of the demonstration a Bill was put forward to Congress for $30,000 for an experimental line between Washington and Baltimore. This was eventually passed and the line was completed, and on 24 May 1844 the first message, "What hath God wrought", was sent between the two cities. In the meantime Morse also worked on the insulation of submarine cables by means of pitch tar and indiarubber.With success achieved, Morse offered his invention to the Government for $100,000, but this was declined, so the invention remained in private hands. To exploit it, Morse founded the Magnetic Telephone Company in 1845, amalgamating the following year with the telegraph company of a Henry O'Reilly to form Western Union. Having failed to obtain patents in Europe, he now found himself in litigation with others in the USA, but eventually, in 1854, the US Supreme Court decided in his favour and he soon became very wealthy. In 1857 a proposal was made for a telegraph service across the whole of the USA; this was completed in just over four months in 1861. Four years later work began on a link to Europe via Canada, Alaska, the Aleutian Islands and Russia, but it was abandoned with the completion of the transatlantic cable, a venture in which he also had some involvement. Showered with honours, Morse became a generous philanthropist in his later years. By 1883 the company he had created was worth $80 million and had a virtual monopoly in the USA.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsLLD, Yale 1846. Fellow of the Academy of Arts and Sciences 1849. Celebratory Banquet, New York, 1869. Statue in New York Central Park 1871. Austrian Gold Medal of Scientific Merit. Danish Knight of the Danneborg. French Légion d'honneur. Italian Knight of St Lazaro and Mauritio. Portuguese Knight of the Tower and Sword. Turkish Order of Glory.BibliographyE.L.Morse (ed.), 1975, Letters and Journals, New York: Da Capo Press (facsimile of a 1914 edition).Further ReadingJ.Munro, 1891, Heroes of the Telegraph (discusses his telegraphic work and its context).C.Mabee, 1943, The American Leonardo: A Life of Samuel Morse; reprinted 1969 (a detailed biography).KFBiographical history of technology > Morse, Samuel Finley Breeze
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7 morse code
رمُوز مورس \ morse: ( also. morse code) a way of sending messages by lamp (with long and short flashes of light) or by wire or radio (producing long and short bursts of sound): The morse message... - - -... means SOS, which is a wellknown call for help. \ مُورس \ morse: (also morse code), a way of sending messages by lamp (with long and short flashes of light) or by wire or radio (producing long and short bursts of sound): The morse message... - - -... means SOS, wich is a wellknown call for help. -
8 morse
رمُوز مورس \ morse: ( also. morse code) a way of sending messages by lamp (with long and short flashes of light) or by wire or radio (producing long and short bursts of sound): The morse message... - - -... means SOS, which is a wellknown call for help. \ مُورس \ morse: (also morse code), a way of sending messages by lamp (with long and short flashes of light) or by wire or radio (producing long and short bursts of sound): The morse message... - - -... means SOS, wich is a wellknown call for help. -
9 morse agg inv
[mɔːs] -
10 morse
agg inv [mɔːs] -
11 Code
m Kode* * *der Codecode* * *[koːt]m -s, -scodeSee:→ auch Kode* * *der1) (a (secret) system of words, letters, or symbols: the Morse Code; The message was in code; We have deciphered the enemy's code.) code2) (a system of symbols etc for translating one type of language into another: There are a number of codes for putting English into a form usable by a computer.) code* * *[ko:t]m codemaschinenlesbare \Codes machine-readable codes* * ** * *-s f.code n. -s Schlüssel m.key code n. -s Umsetzer m.code converter n. -
12 code
[kəud]1. noun1) a collection of laws or rules:مَجْموعَة قَوانينa code of behaviour.
2) a (secret) system of words, letters, or symbols:شِفْرَه، كَلام مَكْتوب بِرُموز سِرِّيّهWe have deciphered the enemy's code.
3) a system of symbols etc for translating one type of language into another:عَلامات رَمْزِيَّهThere are a number of codes for putting English into a form usable by a computer.
2. verbto put into (secret, computer etc) code:يَكْتُبُ بالرُّموز السِّرِّيّهHave you coded the material for the computer?
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13 Morse
[mɔːs] nouna code for signalling and telegraphy in which each letter is made up of dots and dashes, or short and long sounds or flashes of light.شِفْرَة مورِس: كل حَرْف يتكوَّن من عدد من النُّقَط والخُطوط -
14 Morse Code DASH
Radio: DAH -
15 Morse code
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16 Morse code DOT
Radio: DIT -
17 alfabeto Morse
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18 código morse
m.Morse code, Morse.* * *Morse code* * ** * *(n.) = morse codeEx. However, many aphasics can continue to communicate through reading and writing, sometimes with the help of other alphabets, such as braille or morse code.* * ** * *(n.) = morse codeEx: However, many aphasics can continue to communicate through reading and writing, sometimes with the help of other alphabets, such as braille or morse code.
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19 kode morse
morse* * *Morse code -
20 alfabeto Morse
• Morse• Morse code
См. также в других словарях:
Morse (alphabet) — Code morse international L alphabet morse ou code morse, est un code permettant de transmettre un texte à l aide de séries d impulsions courtes et longues, qu elles soit produites par des signes, une lumière ou un geste. Ce code est généralement… … Wikipédia en Français
Morse code abbreviations — differ from prosigns for Morse Code in that they observe normal interletter spacing; that is, they are not run together the way prosigns are. From 1845 until well into the second half of the 20th century, commercial telegraphic code books were… … Wikipedia
Code — redirects here. CODE may also refer to Cultural Olympiad Digital Edition. Decoded redirects here. For the television show, see Brad Meltzer s Decoded. For code (computer programming), see source code. For other uses, see Code (disambiguation).… … Wikipedia
Morse code — Chart of the Morse code letters and numerals Morse code is a method of transmitting textual information as a series of on off tones, lights, or clicks that can … Wikipedia
Morse code for non-Latin alphabets — This is a summary of the use of Morse code to represent alphabets other than Latin. Contents 1 Greek 2 Cyrillic 3 Hebrew … Wikipedia
Morse code mnemonics — Because associating letters and numbers with audible dits and dahs can be difficult, many people have developed mnemonics to help remember the Morse code equivalent of characters. Many different mnemonics can be created for the same subject… … Wikipedia
Morse code — noun a telegraph code in which letters and numbers are represented by strings of dots and dashes (short and long signals) • Syn: ↑Morse, ↑international Morse code • Hypernyms: ↑code • Part Meronyms: ↑dot, ↑dit, ↑ … Useful english dictionary
Morse Code — Ne doit pas être confondu avec Alphabet morse. Morse Code Surnom Morse Code Transmission Pays d’origine Québec, Canada Genre musical ro … Wikipédia en Français
Code wabun — Le code wabun (和文モールス符号, wabun mōrusu fugō?, texte japonais en code morse), ou encore kana code en anglais, est une variété de l alphabet morse utilisé pour transmettre du texte japonais. Sommaire … Wikipédia en Français
morse — /mɔs / (say maws) noun 1. → morse code. –adjective 2. denoting or relating to the morse code or the system of communications using it. 3. relating to any code resembling the morse code. Also, Morse …
morse code — [[t]mɔ͟ː(r)s ko͟ʊd[/t]] also Morse code N UNCOUNT Morse code or morse is a code used for sending messages. It represents each letter of the alphabet using short and long sounds or flashes of light, which can be written down as dots and dashes … English dictionary