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phonograph
[ foh-nuh-graf, -grahf ]
noun
- any sound-reproducing machine using records in the form of cylinders or discs.
phonograph
/ ˈfəʊnəˌɡrɑːf; -ˌɡræf /
noun
- an early form of gramophone capable of recording and reproducing sound on wax cylinders
- Also calledgramophonerecord player a device for reproducing the sounds stored on a record: now usually applied to the nearly obsolete type that uses a clockwork motor and acoustic horn
Word History and Origins
Origin of phonograph1
Compare Meanings
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Example Sentences
Ms. Stoneman made her mark in 1957 with her driving instrumental version of “Lonesome Road Blues,” which made her the first woman to play modern bluegrass banjo on a phonograph record.
He was worried that it would look like a phonograph needle and cement the idea that the building was designed to look like a stack of records.
Each spacecraft carries a golden record: a phonograph that includes greetings from languages around the world and a host of musical excerpts.
There were newfangled inventions: player pianos, phonographs and nickelodeons.
Poetry has been a part of recorded sound ever since Thomas Edison invented the phonograph in 1877, showing off his creation by recording “Mary Had a Little Lamb” on tinfoil.
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