phone - определение. Что такое phone
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Что (кто) такое phone - определение

TELECOMMUNICATIONS DEVICE
Telephones; Phones; Telephone and Telephone System; Station set; ☎; ☏; ✆; Telephone cord; Telephone receiver; ℡; Telephone communication; Phone; Telephone set; Telephone bell; Telpehone; ⌕; 🕾; 🕿; 🕻; 🕽; Corded telephone; Phone development; Telophone; ☎️
  • 1896 telephone from Sweden
  • [[AT&T]] push button telephone made by [[Western Electric]], model 2500 DMG black, 1980
  • Bell's first telephone transmitter, ca. 1876, reenacted 50 years later
  • Alexander Graham Bell's Telephone Patent Drawing
  • Bell placing the first New York to Chicago telephone call in 1892
  • upright=1
  • Acoustic telephone ad, The Consolidated Telephone Co., Jersey City, New Jersey, 1886
  • right
  • upright
  • Reis's telephone
  • A smartphone with a touchscreen user interface, held in [[landscape orientation]]
  • Motorola 8900X-2]] to the 2014 [[iPhone 6 Plus]]
  • A cordless telephone system consisting of a handset resting on a base station (left) and a second handset resting on a battery charger unit (right)
  • An old [[rotary dial]] telephone
  • via=www.theguardian.com}}</ref>
  • magneto]] generator
Найдено результатов: 656
phone         
phone         
phone1
¦ noun
1. a telephone.
2. (phones) informal headphones or earphones.
¦ verb
1. call or speak to someone on the telephone.
2. (phone it in) US informal work or perform in a desultory fashion.
--------
phone2
¦ noun Phonetics a speech sound.
Origin
C19: from Gk phone 'sound, voice'.
phone         
(phones, phoning, phoned)
Frequency: The word is one of the 1500 most common words in English.
1.
The phone is an electrical system that you use to talk to someone else in another place, by dialling a number on a piece of equipment and speaking into it.
You can buy insurance over the phone...
She looked forward to talking to her daughter by phone...
Do you have an address and phone number for him?
= telephone
N-SING: usu the N, also by N
2.
The phone is the piece of equipment that you use when you dial someone's phone number and talk to them.
Two minutes later the phone rang...
Doug's 14-year-old son Jamie answered the phone.
= telephone
N-COUNT: usu the N
3.
If you say that someone picks up or puts down the phone, you mean that they lift or replace the receiver.
She picked up the phone, and began to dial Maurice Campbell's number...
= receiver
N-SING: usu the N
4.
When you phone someone, you dial their phone number and speak to them by phone.
He'd phoned Laura to see if she was better...
I got more and more angry as I waited for her to phone.
= telephone, ring
VERB: V n, V
5.
If you say that someone is on the phone, you mean that they are speaking to someone else by phone.
She's always on the phone, wanting to know what I've been up to.
PHRASE: v-link PHR, PHR after v
Phone         
·add. ·noun & ·vt Colloq. for Telephone.
Phone (novel)         
2017 NOVEL BY WILL SELF
Phone (Will Self novel)
Phone is the eleventh novel by Will Self, published in 2017. It concludes a "modernist" trilogy also consisting of Umbrella and Shark.
Phone (phonetics)         
BASIC UNIT OF SOUND IN SPEECH
Sound (speech); Speech sound; Phonetic sound; Phone (linguistics)
In phonetics and linguistics, a phone is any distinct speech sound or gesture, regardless of whether the exact sound is critical to the meanings of words.
phones         
informal headphones or earphones.
telephone receiver         
n. see receiver1-2
telephone         
¦ noun
1. a system for transmitting voices over a distance using wire or radio, by converting acoustic vibrations to electrical signals.
2. an instrument used as part of such a system, typically including a handset with a transmitting microphone and a set of numbered buttons by which a connection can be made to another such instrument.
¦ verb ring or speak to (someone) using the telephone.
?make a telephone call.
Derivatives
telephoner noun
telephonic adjective
telephonically adverb
Telephone         
An instrument for the transmission of articulate speech by the electric current. The current is defined as of the undulatory type. (See Current, Undulatory.) The cut shows what may be termed the fundamental telephone circuit. A line wire is shown terminating in ground plates and with a telephone in circuit at each end. The latter consists of a magnet N S with a coil of insulated wire H surrounding one end. Facing the pole of the magnet is a soft iron diaphragm D, held in a frame or mouthpiece T. Any change of current in the line affects the magnetism of the magnet, causing it to attract the diaphragm more or less. The magnet and diaphragm really constitute a little electric motor, the diaphragm vibrating back and forth through an exceedingly short range, for changes in the magnetic attraction. The principle of the reversibility of the dynamo applies here. If the magnet is subjected to no change in magnetism, and if the diaphragm is moved or vibrated in front of its poles, currents will be induced in the wire bobbin which surrounds its end. If two such magnets with bobbins and diaphragms are arranged as shown, vibrations imparted to one diaphragm will send currents through the line which, affecting the magnetism of the distant magnet, will cause its diaphragm to vibrate in exact accordance with the motions of the first or motor diaphragm. In the combination one telephone represents a dynamo, the other a motor. If the vibrations of the diaphragm are imparted by the voice, the voice with all its modulations will be reproduced by the telephone at the distant end of the line. Fig. 324. DIAGRAM OF BELL TELEPHONES AND LINE WITH EARTH CONNECTIONS. Fig. 325. SECTION OF BELL TELEPHONE. The above gives the essential features of the Bell telephone. In practice the telephone is used only as the receiver. As transmitter a microphone is employed. To give the current a battery, generally of the open circuit type, is used, and the current in the line is an induced or secondary one. The microphone which is talked to, and which is the seat of the current variations which reproduce original sound, is termed the transmitter, the telephone in which the sounds are produced at the distant end of the line is termed the receiver. Fig. 325 shows the construction of the Bell telephone in universal use in this country as the receiver. M is a bar magnet, in a case L L. B B is a bobbin or coil of insulated wire surrounding one end of the magnet. D is the diaphragm of soft iron plate (ferrotype metal), and E is the mouthpiece. The terminals of the coil B B connect with the binding screws C C. The wire in the coil is No. 36, A. W. G., and is wound to a resistance of about 80 ohms. As typical transmitter the Blake instrument may be cited. It is a carbon microphone. It is shown in section in the cut; a is the mouthpiece and e is a diaphragm of iron plate, although other substances could be used; f is a steel spring, with a platinum contact piece at its end. One end bears against the diaphragm, the other against a carbon block k. The latter is carried by a brass block p, and pressure is maintained between these contacts by the spring g and weight of the piece c, which by gravity tends to press all together. The current passes by way of the spring f, carbon button k and spring g through the circuit indicated. A battery is in circuit with these parts. If a telephone is also in circuit, and the transmitter is spoken against, the diaphragm vibrating affects the resistance of the carbon-platinum contact, without even breaking the contact, and the telephone reproduces the sound. The heavy
piece of metal C acts by its inertia to prevent breaking of the contact. The position of this piece c, which is carried by the brass plate m, is adjusted by the screw n. Fig. 326. SECTION OF BLAKE TRANSMITTER. In practice the transmitter and battery are usually on a local circuit, which includes the primary of an induction coil. The line and distant receiving telephone are in circuit with the secondary of the induction coil, without any battery.

Википедия

Telephone

A telephone is a telecommunications device that permits two or more users to conduct a conversation when they are too far apart to be easily heard directly. A telephone converts sound, typically and most efficiently the human voice, into electronic signals that are transmitted via cables and other communication channels to another telephone which reproduces the sound to the receiving user. The term is derived from Greek: τῆλε (tēle, far) and φωνή (phōnē, voice), together meaning distant voice. A common short form of the term is phone, which came into use early in the telephone's history.

In 1876, Alexander Graham Bell was the first to be granted a United States patent for a device that produced clearly intelligible replication of the human voice at a second device. This instrument was further developed by many others, and became rapidly indispensable in business, government, and in households.

The essential elements of a telephone are a microphone (transmitter) to speak into and an earphone (receiver) which reproduces the voice at a distant location. The receiver and transmitter are usually built into a handset which is held up to the ear and mouth during conversation. The transmitter converts the sound waves to electrical signals which are sent through the telecommunication system to the receiving telephone, which converts the signals into audible sound in the receiver or sometimes a loudspeaker. Telephones permit transmission in both directions simultaneously.

Most telephones also contain an alerting feature, such as a ringer or a visual indicator, to announce an incoming telephone call. Telephone calls are initiated most commonly with a keypad or dial, affixed to the telephone, to enter a telephone number, which is the address of the call recipient's telephone in the telecommunication system, but other methods existed in the early history of the telephone.

The first telephones were directly connected to each other from one customer's office or residence to another customer's location. Being impractical beyond just a few customers, these systems were quickly replaced by manually operated centrally located switchboards. These exchanges were soon connected together, eventually forming an automated, worldwide public switched telephone network. For greater mobility, various radio systems were developed for transmission between mobile stations on ships and automobiles in the mid-20th century. Hand-held mobile phones were introduced for personal service starting in 1973. In later decades, their analog cellular system evolved into digital networks with greater capability and lower cost.

Convergence in communication services has provided a broad spectrum of capabilities in cell phones, including mobile computing, giving rise to the smartphone, the dominant type of telephone in the world today.