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View synonyms for Marconi

Marconi

[ mahr-koh-nee; Italian mahr-kaw-nee ]

noun

  1. Gu·gliel·mo [goo-, lyel, -maw], Marchese, 1874–1937, Italian electrical engineer and inventor, especially in the field of wireless telegraphy: Nobel Prize in physics 1909.


Marconi

/ mɑːˈkəʊnɪ /

noun

  1. MarconiGuglielmo18741937MItalianSCIENCE: physicist Guglielmo (ɡuʎˈʎɛlmo). 1874–1937, Italian physicist, who developed radiotelegraphy and succeeded in transmitting signals across the Atlantic (1901): Nobel prize for physics 1909
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Marconi

/ mär-kō /

  1. Italian physicist and inventor who was the first to use radio waves to transmit signals in Morse code across the Atlantic Ocean (1901). Soon after his experiment, he developed shortwave radio equipment and helped establish radio as a widely used medium for communications.
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Example Sentences

But recently the firm has stirred up controversy stating its desire to retrieve an object from the ship itself - the Marconi radio equipment which transmitted the Titanic’s distress calls on the night of the sinking.

From BBC

The company’s original 2024 expedition plan also included possibly retrieving objects from the ship’s famed Marconi room.

The Marconi room holds the ship’s radio - a Marconi wireless telegraph machine - which broadcast the Titanic’s increasingly frantic distress signals after the ocean liner hit an iceberg.

Those could include “objects from inside the Marconi room, but only if such objects are not affixed to the wreck itself.”

Michael Marconi, a Google spokesman, said Google had prevented its photo app from labeling anything as a monkey or ape because it decided the benefit “does not outweigh the risk of harm.”

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