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Example sentences for "ciphers"

Lexicographically close words:
cions; cious; cipher; ciphered; ciphering; cipollino; cippi; cippus; cipue; circa
  1. So he said "Well your lady friends was all cheated then because this is ciphers all right but its the kind of messages they love to read because it means kisses.

  2. So I says "I have wrote letters to a whole lot of girls but I never had to write nothing in ciphers because I wasn't never ashamed of anything I wrote.

  3. And he says "Well that's some more ciphers but they's probably a little gal out in Chi that don't half to look at no key to figure it out.

  4. I shall write, father, and make use of the ciphers agreed upon between us.

  5. You will write these reports to me in ciphers, which I shall acquaint you with, and swear to me that you will give the key to these ciphers to no human being?

  6. But as he did so he paused for a moment and then drew the papers forth again, determined there and then to compare the two ciphers, for he felt almost positive in his own mind that the two ciphers would be found to be identical.

  7. The old man has worked on what is called the keyword cipher, which is the most difficult of all ciphers to discover.

  8. The keyword is the real difficulty in ciphers of this kind.

  9. From Drawings and Sketches made, and Ciphers and Autographs traced, by the author.

  10. Her own pictures, to which she had carefully affixed in delicate violet ciphers the name "Agla," she directed placed on exhibition in a New York gallery, and ultimately sold for the benefit of the orphans of artists.

  11. Silently she listened, looking steadily up at his noble face, where intense mental anguish had left unwonted pallor, and printed new ciphers on brow and lips; and when his adjuration ended, she put out her hand.

  12. For suppose that ciphers were well managed, there be multitudes of them which exclude the decipherer.

  13. Take the digits of the decimal for numerator; for the denominator put down 1 followed by as many ciphers as there are digits in the decimal.

  14. Divide as in whole numbers, annexing ciphers to the dividend, if necessary; then point off from the right of the quotient as many places as the decimal places in the dividend exceed those in the divisor--prefixing ciphers if necessary.

  15. Multiply as in whole numbers, and point off from the right of the product as many places as there are decimal places in both multiplier and multiplicand--prefixing ciphers if necessary.

  16. Annex two ciphers to the fixed rate per cent, and divide by the cost per share.

  17. I have said enough to convince you that ciphers of this nature are readily soluble, and to give you some insight into the rationale of their development.

  18. Diplomatic ciphers are slang; the pontifical chancellery by using 26 for Rome, grkztntgzyal for despatch, and abfxustgrnogrkzu tu XI.

  19. It was one of the many figure ciphers then in use.

  20. I am quite sure that my neat ciphers gave the usurper James a very trying week of continual study.

  21. I wrote a varying arrangement of ciphers on each leaf, in the neatest hand I could command.

  22. The use to be made of these tables will be evident when the solution of different types of ciphers is taken up.

  23. However such ciphers constantly crop up in cipher examination, being used for special communication between parties who consider the regular military ciphers too complicated.

  24. The solution of route ciphers is necessarily one of try and fit, with the knowledge that such ciphers usually are read up and down columns.

  25. The casual worker with ciphers can get along with much less, but the methods of filing and keeping a record of all messages studied should be followed wherever possible.

  26. It is believed that each Field Army should have such an office where all ciphers intercepted by forces under command of the Field Army Commander should be sent at once for examination.

  27. Work with transposition ciphers must necessarily include much of the fit and try method.

  28. Thus substitution ciphers may vary from those of extreme simplicity to those whose complication defies any ordinary method of analysis and whose solution requires the possession of long messages and much time and study.

  29. To one familiar with monoliteral transposition ciphers, even the best of route ciphers offers but little difficulty.

  30. In truth, their great object is to reduce your majesty and the regent to the condition of mere ciphers in the government.

  31. Their indignation was heightened by the tricky arrangement, which, while it left them ciphers in the administration, made them responsible to the people for its measures.

  32. Similar forms to those embellished with royal ciphers and monograms and portraits were subsequently employed for persons of lesser degree.

  33. It is intended that the Monograms and Ciphers shown in the following plates be considered as outlines only, as models or working drawings.

  34. Some of the most beautiful Ciphers I have seen are to be found on old French bindings, many of which would be unintelligible if we did not know for whom the books were bound.

  35. These Ciphers form in many instances the sole decoration of the binding, sometimes but a single impression appearing on each side, yet the book satisfies one as being perfectly decorated.

  36. Ciphers not interwoven, but placed side by side forming decorative lines, will be found on Plates XXIII, XXXIX, XLVII, and LX.

  37. Monograms and Ciphers of three different letters will be found on Plates CXIV, CXV, and CXVI.

  38. Obviously this class of ciphers presents greater difficulties to the skill of the decipherer.

  39. Details of the working of these ciphers may be found in the treatises named in this article.

  40. Bacon remarks that though ciphers were commonly in letters and alphabets yet they might be in words.

  41. The simplest and commonest of all the ciphers is that in which the writer selects in place of the proper letters certain other letters in regular advance.

  42. In the second and subsequent reports of the same commission several keys to ciphers have been catalogued, which seem to refer themselves to the methods of cryptography under notice.

  43. Ciphers have been constructed on the principle of altering the places of the letters without changing their powers.

  44. They would indeed be ciphers to him, for how could he feel the difference of a few thousands more or less in his immense banking-account?

  45. Add the ciphers composing the year of the birth or of the death of some of the kings of the third race, and the result of each sum is the titular number of each prince.

  46. I understand nursing and I know how to drive a car; but I have stayed here because my knowledge of ciphers seemed to fit me for this work.

  47. You see it's one of those hopeless arbitrary ciphers for which there is no earthly solution except by discovering and securing the code book and working it out that way.

  48. He practises the four rules with extraordinary facility, arranges the double ciphers as he did the double vowels in the word Heaven, and rarely makes an error.

  49. Please observe the ciphers which stand in their places.

  50. The note contained merely the names of Morton and Vinal, with ciphers affixed, referring to those in the first letter.

  51. The division is decimal and may be readily accomplished by merely pointing off as many places as there are ciphers in the resistance employed from arm B.


  52. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "ciphers" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.