Transmitting
[træns'mɪt]
Definition
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Transmit
Typed by Aileen
Examples
- A representation of the punched paper for transmitting the word Bain is shown in this diagram. Frederick C. Bakewell. Great Facts.
- Each machine was operated by a clerk, who translated the message into telegraphic characters and prepared the transmitting tape by punching the necessary perforations therein. Frank Lewis Dyer. Edison, His Life and Inventions.
- In addition, there was a special transmitting device in the shape of a musical reed, or buzzer. Frank Lewis Dyer. Edison, His Life and Inventions.
- As has been already seen, he deprived our heroine of the right of transmitting her letters direct by the ambassador's bag. Harriette Wilson. The Memoirs of Harriette Wilson.
- There is a big distortion in the transmitting of ideas. Walter Lippmann. A Preface to Politics.
- Thus, an extended contact was made, which, by transmitting a long impulse, resulted in the marking of a dash upon the receiving tape. Frank Lewis Dyer. Edison, His Life and Inventions.
- Then he throws in the transmitting apparatus, which automatically disconnects the receiving end. Rupert S. Holland. Historic Inventions.
- He was precocious to an extraordinary degree, for in 1895, when only twenty-one, he had produced a wireless transmitting apparatus that he patented in Italy. Rupert S. Holland. Historic Inventions.
- Bell was undoubtedly the first inventor of the art of transmitting speech over an electric circuit, but, with his particular form of telephone, the field was circumscribed. Frank Lewis Dyer. Edison, His Life and Inventions.
- Special contrivances and adaptations of the telegraph for printing stock reports and for transmitting fire alarm, police, and emergency calls, have been invented. William Henry Doolittle. Inventions in the Century.
- The transmitting instrument had five small wheels or rollers, instead of two, for making contacts through the perforations and causing short electric impulses to pass over the lines. Frank Lewis Dyer. Edison, His Life and Inventions.
- The receiving and the transmitting instruments are alike, the only difference between them being that the style of the copying instrument is steel instead of brass wire. Frederick C. Bakewell. Great Facts.
- In addition, there was a transmitting device in the shape of a musical reed, or buzzer. Frank Lewis Dyer. Edison, His Life and Inventions.
- It embodied, for the practical purpose of transmitting articulate speech to distances, the union of the two great forces,--sound and electricity. William Henry Doolittle. Inventions in the Century.
- Telegraphy is the process of transmitting messages from place to place by means of an electric current. Bertha M. Clark. General Science.
Checked by Leon