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"telegraphs" Antonyms

157 Sentences With "telegraphs"

How to use telegraphs in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "telegraphs" and check conjugation/comparative form for "telegraphs". Mastering all the usages of "telegraphs" from sentence examples published by news publications.

For Paco Rabanne's Julien Dossena, it telegraphs one: his childhood.
Everything about his introduction telegraphs that we'll see him again.
One, it telegraphs that old fellowships are being made new.
Becky, as a photo we eventually see telegraphs, was a mathlete.
Amazon typically spends years researching opportunities before it telegraphs its intentions.
The movie's visual style telegraphs authenticity with countless lengthy close-ups.
It also telegraphs the company's push to work more closely with cities.
In subsequent decades, versions of these batteries powered telegraphs and other devices.
Yet every pair of excruciating heels also telegraphs a subtle masochism: i.e.
Like the "period-proof" underwear brand Thinx, it telegraphs a pro-women identity.
You could argue that "The Last Jedi," telegraphs its spiritual debts to Buddhism.
Dennis is an uptight OCD sufferer who telegraphs violence with his rigidly held body.
The game telegraphs those shifting impressions with little thought bubbles containing a character's face.
The character's preferred name — Will — telegraphs that she is already self-actualized, thank you.
I went for something that telegraphs depth from the moment you lay eyes on it.
Its face is a flat screen that telegraphs "feelings" like embarrassment (rosy cheeks, upturned eyebrows).
They lived before cars, trains, air travel, bicycles, typewriters, telegraphs, sewing machines, photography and refrigeration.
The nearly $2.5 million total investment telegraphs the Democratic Party's strategy in November's midterm elections.
The cursor telegraphs what's to come—what may or may not happen if you tap.
It telegraphs how much they have contributed, and what they are worth in the end.
It telegraphs a sign of diligence and commitment: You are working yourself to the bone.
Where Mr Macron telegraphs his plans early, loudly and clearly, Mrs Merkel is reactive and inscrutable.
And the game telegraphs where and how to use these forms, well ahead of "unlocking" them.
Stella McCartney is one of those (rare) designers that explicitly telegraphs her values, season after season.
It is not only that Mr. Browne's constricted tailoring telegraphs a struggle to manage unruly sexuality.
The steering is weighted perfectly and the steering wheel telegraphs everything the front wheels are feeling.
There are a few ways the series telegraphs the identity of the choking girl in the creek.
Policymakers might slow the slide, but the move also telegraphs where they think the yuan is heading.
Their sweaty collaboration, the first single from Ronson's upcoming album, telegraphs seriousness more than it delivers it.
A paper-based process telegraphs to applicants where the government thinks there are problems with their cases.
Wilson telegraphs Charlotte's growing unease with Faraday's constant presence in the house and increasing influence over their lives.
Even when Apple telegraphs its hardware strategy, it's proving to be nearly impossible for startups to beat them.
In some cases, the electrical poltergeist in the wires seemed to make the telegraphs work better than usual.
But outside of the immediate benefits for athletes, the hardware also telegraphs an interesting future for Nike's connected future.
"I think what's troubling is that the letter telegraphs potential policy changes like what we saw in Syria," Sen.
Read more: Then there's the culture such a tumultuous executive cadre telegraphs to the outside world about internal practices.
But its pitch for its new feature clearly telegraphs that it intends to avoid the pitfalls into which Facebook stumbled.
It's a lovely moment, which telegraphs a relationship of equals between two smart people who love and respect each other.
For that, V.R. has to become like trains, telegraphs and movies, so essential that we remake ourselves to suit them.
Before that, the closest thing people had to it was telegraphs transmitted via the dots and dashes of Morse code.
Ferguson kicks hard and effectively, but he telegraphs every kick he throws by stopping dead, then walking up into it.
Thing about Mason ... even though he pre-teen, he's super confident in his skills and it telegraphs to the audience.
The forecast by the president seemed to contradict Mr. Trump's own declaration that he never telegraphs his moves in advance.
What Maia and Lucca wear to the last meeting with Madeline has a dour, funereal quality that telegraphs the outcome.
Interviews with Mr. Schnabel reveal few interesting points, while a grating soundtrack telegraphs how it thinks you should be feeling.
" The former Olympian's face telegraphs their actual anger, which essentially comes off as "female sexuality is bad, never do this again.
But the "common logic" part of Rivera's statement is so intriguing for what it telegraphs about the public's perception of Bey.
What Vikander telegraphs in this scene is more than just the physical elements of how the early stage of miscarriage proceeds.
"Mary Magdalene" dutifully telegraphs the nobility and compassion of its title character while remaining noncommittal about everything else in its path.
"We have this iconic image that telegraphs the mission of the museum so beautifully," she said, referring to the Sanaa building.
With an overbearing score, "Breaking In" telegraphs almost everything that happens yet still provides several jolts amid its occasionally questionable twists.
"Atlanta" telegraphs its hip-hop familiarity with restraint, allowing snippets of meticulously chosen music to waft from car speakers and headphones.
But as Perkowski counters, Mattis's recommendations and Trump's endorsement telegraphs exactly what they plan to do — and they haven't ceased at all.
At others, it telegraphs the fact that the main role of the agency was slowly shifting to the one revealed by Snowden.
But less obviously, you'd want it to detect the intensity of your pushing and pulling of a sofa, which telegraphs your intentions.
It telegraphs allied compatibility and competence in peacetime, putting China, Russia and rogue states on notice that they confront indomitable fighting forces.
A reporter at a Sarasota television station, she wants to do important stories, as her sit-down with a nonexistent Nixon telegraphs.
After stints in the studio with Kelela, he returns with a debut album that telegraphs its intention in its title, Song Feel.
The model Binx Walton telegraphs more than a hint of that slatternly upmarket allure in a Tom Ford fall 2017 eyewear campaign.
Unfortunately for Iron Fist's second season, it follows and telegraphs those dreaded beats almost to the letter, eliminating any excitement or unpredictability.
Trump has talked repeatedly about banning Muslims from entering the country, and simultaneously telegraphs his intent to deport millions of insufficiently American Americans.
His wardrobe both telegraphs the preternatural calm of a seeker and throws off the distinct whiff of joy he leaves in his wake.
It was established in 1934 to ensure consumers have fair and reasonable access to everything from telegraphs to (later, obviously) high-speed internet.
"It telegraphs to despots around the world they can murder people with impunity, and that this president will have their back," he said.
The average citizen had access to a steady stream of information from newspapers, telegraphs, and word of mouth among an increasingly transitory public.
Its stanzas begin to read like telegraphs from a freshly broken world: Every runnel was a Rubiconwhere every ditch was a last ditch.
But for Trump the pattern appears exacerbated since he telegraphs his choices early in the process and selects nominees well outside the government norm.
Then there's the appearance: In the contemporary kitchen — increasingly the active heart of the home — the counter is a defining feature that telegraphs personality.
Miley Cyrus and Mark Ronson's "sweaty collaboration, the first single from Ronson's upcoming album, telegraphs seriousness more than it delivers it," writes Jon Caramanica.
On the surface, he convincingly telegraphs contrition and a deep disgust at his own weaknesses, but disarming self-flagellation has always been his art.
How to mediate between the demands of modern reality — movement that telegraphs an idea of young Latino people today — and a sense of timelessness?
If you pay close attention during "Drawn to the Blood," this is exactly the kind of plotline Link telegraphs towards the end of the episode.
Exhibits include a vast and stellar collection of telegraphs, telephones, radios, televisions, a Theremin (an instrument that uses only antennas and electricity to create sound).
Just the description of this scene — or the even earlier scene where Cruz dominates a simulated race — probably telegraphs where all of this is headed.
The move telegraphs that the general election has officially begun for Clinton, and that the DNC is shifting its focus to November even as Sen.
Deciphering such clues is like forecasting the weather before radar or telegraphs: Noticing how the wind ruffles the leaves, watching how the animals are acting.
He has removed his obvious telegraphs, but there is still a preliminary motion—his heel comes in to cut down on the pivoting needed to kick.
But the wealthy congressman would likely be one in a sea of Democratic candidates and would face long odds, even if he telegraphs his move early.
Having Charlie Wilson on your track telegraphs something, and that something is at least partly nostalgia for early '00s Dave Chappell and a love of smoothness.
The scene telegraphs the shifting power dynamics Thurgood represents, but it also announces that the movie will resort to easy, ingratiating comedy to sell the goods.
After all, they might have said, imagine someone transported from 1816 to 1916: what would that person have thought of railroads, telegraphs, machine guns, and steamships?
This "you're on your own" policy is completely contrary to the message the president often telegraphs to the nation's law enforcement officers during his rallies and speeches.
She is not embraced for her simplicity, but rather for the way her elegiac, gloomy pop telegraphs layers of meaning and implies both actual and imagined histories.
Still, nothing telegraphs Sanders' strategy like the four-day festival planned for central Massachusetts, a clear play to drum up support among his strongest demographic — young voters.
But I don't think other taxpayers should have to subsidize my hobby any more than if I were a lover of manual typewriters, telegraphs, or horseback riding.
Unlike some other myths, however, Westworld's central premise doesn't work without our participation; it's why the show telegraphs so many of its twists, and is unconcerned with others.
But how much it telegraphs about whether Sansa is laying the groundwork for a future power move isn't totally clear, and depends on what you think of Sansa.
It has also been well established that the stock market pulls back any time the Fed adopts a more hawkish stance (ie, when it telegraphs interest rate hikes).
Of course it's also satisfying because each smackdown is followed by a resurrection, a shaky rise from the floor and a counterattack that telegraphs resolve, superiority and victory.
And he telegraphs Henry's misery beautifully, as will come as no surprise to fans of his from Call Me By Your Name or Lady Bird or Beautiful Boy.
Nobody was hurt — he escaped with his wife and four daughters — but the photograph included in "Unseen" telegraphs a delirious horror that nods, darkly, to his subsequent assassination.
China will mark its 4th annual Space Day on Wednesday as it celebrates its achievements in aerospace and telegraphs its ambitions to explore the moon and other celestial bodies.
Then again, part of the problem -- having seen seven episodes -- is that "Four Weddings" feels like it telegraphs its key beats, straining to find wrinkles to prolong the drama.
" The first item is the simplest: cornbread, a crunchy-moist round that telegraphs "we're humble and casual," while the accompanying cultured butter says, "but it's going to be amazing.
The glass and metal sandwich design is familiar (from the back, it looks strikingly like last year's Samsung Galaxy S6) and telegraphs that 4S isn't a bargain bin phone.
His visual vocabulary is sparse, gentle, and considered; its preciousness telegraphs Wilmarth's minimalism with an aura of affection, a unique warmth that alludes to the linguistic dexterity of Mallarmé.
And while their physical sloppiness may once have been seen as reflecting a mental sloppiness, in an increasingly airbrushed and filtered world it telegraphs unvarnished truth telling and reality.
The centerpiece is the multi-act epic "Like Me," on which he telegraphs his intent in an opening monologue: "This is about me and what I am," he says.
The pricing and high demand reflect what Wall Street's top investment firms think about the stock, and telegraphs how the year's most anticipated IPO might fare in the public market.
But it's hard to watch a show, even one that telegraphs its big moments as transparently as TWD, just go through the motions of a fake surprise and tepid reveal.
Economists and investors are preparing for Fed's next policy move announcement later this week, eager to see if the central bank telegraphs a rate cut amid weakening economic data worldwide.
"Thoroughbreds" opens on an ominous, murkily lit scene — a girl, a horse and a worryingly sharp knife — that telegraphs just how ugly things are going to get in this movie.
One of the smartest things about "Charlie Says" is that, as the name telegraphs, it isn't really about its title character, who can feel like a blank even when onscreen.
The blue that telegraphs belief in individual rights, and pledges its troth to an organization that has been much in the spotlight since discussion began around President Trump's travel ban.
Everything about the servant telegraphs to the narrator that he is a part of the modern, the "rising" generation, most notably his turquoise earring, his dyed, pomaded hair, his mincing gait.
Because it telegraphs emotion — both mournful and hopeful — and involves some vocal acrobatics, it has become shorthand for Big Emotional Moment and employed by performers looking to stamp themselves with authenticity.
Maybe one of those will shake something loose here, but it telegraphs that Spain realizes it might want to score soon rather than leave this to PKs in a hostile stadium.
The game invites the player to investigate its corners but never telegraphs anything explicitly beyond a handful of white-dotted interaction points, including the exploration of each family member's personal journal.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. government is scrapping rules on telegraphs even though carriers no longer exist, part of the Trump administration's effort to slash regulations, the Federal Communications Commission said on Thursday.
The human relationship with time changed substantially with the arrival of modernity — trains and telegraphs and wristwatches all around — and we can see it changing yet again in our globally networked era.
The music (by Elliot Goldenthal) telegraphs the emotions too precisely, and Mr. Haruf's wry and subtle plot is mishandled, so that there is both too much dramatic conflict and not quite enough.
Tackling some legislative house cleaning, the Florida Senate sent the governor a bill to remove a dusty chapter from state statutes dealing with telegraphs, including $50 fines for not promptly delivering messages.
Whannell telegraphs the relationship, its power dynamics and ills, when he introduces Cecilia (Elisabeth Moss) lying in bed in the middle of the night with a man's arm curled around her waist.
In his new special as well as his HBO series, "Crashing," Pete Holmes displays one of the more boisterous laughs in comedy today, one that pointedly telegraphs a joyous point of view.
Notice here that Bisping isn't coming in from a moving start, there are no feints, he pauses and telegraphs his intention just as Yushin Okami did every time he threw his own jab.
Whatever Trump's reasons, it's striking how effectively the word "rat" telegraphs the choices available to someone, like McGahn, who cooperates with the special counsel -- even with the President's assent, as he points out.
The confrontation between Adelaide and Red testifies to Peele's strength with actors — here, he makes the most of Nyong'o's dueling turns — but, once Red starts explaining things, it also telegraphs the story's weakness.
Today's announcement is in line with the telegraphs we heard from the company in the deep dive TechCrunch conducted a few weeks ago as part of our first EC-1 package on Extra Crunch.
The bill would also establish a process for reviewing the AUMF every four years without sunsetting the authorization in an effort to address administration concerns that a sunset date telegraphs a timeline to adversaries.
Boyega's fine performance telegraphs most of Dismukes's growing dismay through his eyes, as he slowly realizes the system he counted on to treat everyone equally under the law simply isn't going to do so.
New York magazine declared the Books Are Magic tote bag a "status tote," one that quietly telegraphs your sophistication to anyone who sees you, even if you've never actually purchased a book from the store.
" Writer Doreen St. Félix described the song best: "'Consideration' could not care less about sounding like a feminist anthem in the proper way, one that telegraphs passive misandry in the service of forcing female communion.
Today, the spirit of the written, kōan-like instruction pieces she produced early in her career has given way to the nuggets of wisdom or well-meaning provocation Ono telegraphs via Twitter to the world.
During the creation of the first global economy, the one made possible by railroads, steamships, and telegraphs, the world seemed to bifurcate into industrial nations and the agricultural raw/material producers who catered to them.
For all of us, what we choose to wear in the morning telegraphs a message about who we are; and for those in the public eye, this effect is simply multiplied a hundredfold (or more).
I'd also argue that in some circles, walking around with an increasingly etched face telegraphs that maybe you're not really taking care of yourself: that you haven't absorbed the other message about superfoods, Pilates or green juices.
Similarly noisy is Junkrat's RIP-tire, an explosive rubber death wheel that telegraphs its arrival with the sound of a motor being kickstarted, and Hanzo's Dragonstrike, which fires two giant, green dragons alongside his Japanese war cry.
But those scenes aside, the script almost always inserts a speech where a shrug or a smile would do better, and that's before the intrusive and persistent score telegraphs every emotion it thinks you should be feeling.
A scene in which Olsen and Plaza sing Kaycee and Jojo's 1997 hit "All My Life" — and the way Ingrid's face telegraphs that she's taking this song much differently than breezy Taylor — is wince-worthy comic gold.
And in the world of weddings, where design and decoration choices are often framed in terms of their adherence to or deviation from tradition, script signals the formality of a big life event while added bounce telegraphs individuality.
It helps that for almost all of these images she uses a 4x5 view camera with transparency film, which makes her not only take her time, but also telegraphs to her subject that this sitting is serious business.
The actor bares himself and his doubts, but when the stuntman takes off his shirt, Tarantino throws his lot in with an old-school ideal — behold, the cool man of action — and telegraphs the film's frenzied violent end.
Still, Bo and Woody's sweet reunion is sure to inspire thousands of couples' costumes next Halloween, and their mission is high-stakes and full of suspense, despite the fact that the film telegraphs its multiple twists from minute one.
Looks tend to be destiny for character actors, who are often cast for what their physicality, including their faces, suggests: the jutting brow that, however unfairly, telegraphs menace or the plump, roundness that conveys joviality but sometimes something sinister.
Simply put, "venture," in this case, suggests that the capital is being used to fund growth and burn; "debt," obviously, telegraphs that the capital comes at a substantial discount to the cost of equity and will have to be repaid eventually.
The heartfelt film tells the story of a World War II messenger boy who experiences pain, love and hope through the telegraphs he receives, and is based off of Pulitzer Prize-winning author William Saroyan's 1943 novel The Human Comedy.
Yet there is some evidence that a sizable number of white men see the push toward diversity, along with the larger changes it telegraphs, as less about joining and more about replacement, and a country that is less hospitable to them.
But its design clearly telegraphs that it's not supposed to be a replacement for my phone, or even an extension of my phone: the basic, two-inch long cylinder doesn't have a display of any sort, just a single multicolor LED light.
King is among a bipartisan group of lawmakers in the Senate who have criticized both the Obama and Trump administrations for failing to set forth a comprehensive cyber doctrine that telegraphs repercussions for adversaries who launch attacks against the United States in cyberspace.
Some think it was unwise to link the debt to the IPO because it both telegraphs the company's cash needs to the market and sets up a situation in which a cash crunch means the company may be rushed into doing an IPO.
When the administration telegraphs plans to use its doubts about inspections as an excuse to leave the deal, it's not surprising that the I.A.E.A. and our negotiating partners resist American requests to activate the deal's provisions for access to suspicious military sites.
It's hard to know exactly what you're seeing in François Ozon's deliriously campy "Double Lover," which, early on, telegraphs the kinks to come with a body-part close-up so spellbindingly abstract that it takes a long moment to register as a vagina.
"You say it's Bonnie and Clyde but I feel like Bobby and Whitney/ Don't know if you ride for me or if you riding against me," he laments on "Would You," in a voice that's sweet and breathy but that also telegraphs uncertainty.
That's to an extent due to the hazy sense of ease he telegraphs to some voters; how he registers as having the "right" profile -- older, white, male -- to trounce President Donald Trump (who, notably, is 73) in a high-stakes political contest.
The relationship between Ellie and Kurt, which should be its emotional axis, is a pallid romance punctuated by near-tragedy and solemn, beautifully shot movie sex — the kind that telegraphs profound feelings through the use of candles and graceful changes of position.
The context: AT&T dominated the growing industry of electronic communication early in the 20th century, not just through telephones (it squeezed independent telephone companies by limiting their access to Bell's superior long-distance service) but also through telegraphs, with its controlling stake in Western Union.
"The confluence of privilege around executive physicals, where elite institutions offer expensive care to the elite of the business world, telegraphs the message that while focusing on value, evidence, and avoidance of unnecessary care is appropriate for the masses it is inadequate for the elite," Korenstein added.
Though he never states it outright, Freeman's inclusion of poetry by a Foxconn worker who committed suicide in 2014 telegraphs where his allegiances lie: They've trained me to become docile Don't know how to shout or rebel How to complain or denounce Only how to silently suffer exhaustion.
My late West Indian-American mother, a single parent with four daughters, would have loved the Jamaican dance-hall sound that infuses "Hold Up," as well as the message that Beyoncé telegraphs in that song and others: that her life and, by extension, all black female lives, and bodies, matter.
These actors all have the advantage of being able to give easy, casual, cheeky performances — the sort in which every smirk, nod and cocked eyebrow telegraphs that something is about to happen that will make the audience feel not so much surprised as assured that the surprises will continue to arrive on schedule.
"Disparaging or failing to support Congresswoman Waters is an affront to her and Black women across the country and telegraphs a message that the Democratic Party can ill afford: that it does not respect Black women's leadership and political power and discounts the impact of Black women and millennial voters," the letter says.
His passionate response to the WSJ story — which says Kushner intervened in an executive order drafting to scrap language critical of the 2015 global climate deal — telegraphs inevitable tensions between the White House's moderating influences (Jared and Ivanka) and those who want to gut the regulatory state using the sharpest knife in the drawer.
Mr. Porowski also telegraphs his taste through novelty shirts, including concert tees from the National and the Strokes, and three Helvetica-ampersand T-shirts that list the names of the main characters in "A Little Life," the relentlessly sad homosocial novel by Hanya Yanagihara, the editor of T: The New York Times Style Magazine.
"Disparaging or failing to support Congresswoman Waters is an affront to her and Black women across the country and telegraphs a message that the Democratic Party can ill afford: that it does not respect Black women's leadership and political power and discounts the impact of Black women and millennial voters," the groups wrote in the letter.
If President George Bush revealed his patrician upbringing by requesting "a splash" more coffee at a truck stop in New Hampshire, and John Kerry helped reinforce his image as a New England blue blood by trying to order a cheese steak with Swiss in South Philadelphia, Mr. Trump's diet also telegraphs to his blue-collar base that he is one of them.
Still, the family held tight to its equestrian roots, basing the shape of a perfume bottle on the contour of a stirrup or a coat closure on a harness bit, and thus maintaining an instantly recognizable iconography (its tiny duc carriage logo began appearing in 1950, long after horses had disappeared from the mainstream), one that to this day telegraphs gentility tempered by an earthy outdoorsiness.
The polls offer a way of framing the election: as a referendum on how white men see their place in a changing country; and, one layer beneath, on whether they perceive themselves as being joined by women and minorities or rather as being replaced by them… …Yet there is some evidence that a sizable number of white men see the push toward diversity, along with the larger changes it telegraphs, as less about joining and more about replacement, and a country that is less hospitable to them.

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