With this rainbow-bright rectangle of shimmering silks worn folded over the shoulders in the ordinary way the peacock must have been considerably telescoped and distorted.
The telescoped legs came to view jerkily, but with haste.
But it was noticeable that the legs were in some curious mannertelescoped up out of sight, once Jolly was seated.
The phenomenon was of common occurrence,--they were always telescoped then.
When they operate without the medium of images, this seems to be a telescoped process.
Also, by a telescoped process, words come in time to produce directly the effects which would have been produced by the images with which they were associated.
It is true that this process may be telescoped through the operation of the word-habit.
The general law of telescoped processes is that, if A causes B and B causes C, it will happen in time that A will cause C directly, without the intermediary of B.
The words have been used in an environment which produced certain emotions; by a telescoped process, the words alone are now capable of producing similar emotions.
She carried in one hand a fishing rod which had been telescoped till it was no bigger than a cane; in the other she carried a small fishing basket.
The short, telescoped fishing rod she carried swung round her head and completed its next half-circle at the head of the reptile, even as it was about to strike.
Suppose two such globes of energy, covered with dust, were to be telescopedor attached together, would you marvel at the fact?
We saw that the motor reaction (which has its counterpart in everyday life) is a telescoped impulsive action.
We have already had an instance: the sensory reaction is a skeleton impulsive action; but the motor reaction, which results from a shift of emphasis in the instruction, is not sensorimotor; it is an abbreviated or telescoped impulsive action.
At Riardo, between Rome and Naples, a passenger train for Naples was partly telescoped by a following goods train; eleven persons were killed or mortally injured, about fifty less seriously injured.
Isabella, while the modern language prefers Bella; Maud for Matilda is a telescoped form of Old Fr.
The carriage next to the engine was telescoped by the heavier corridor coaches behind.
So he merely hurled his big body against the starboard gunwale and toppled overboard--and thirty feet further on the boat struck with a crash that echoed up and down the river, telescoped and drove under the log boom.
In any event the boat would be telescoped down to the cockpit and sink at the edge of the log field.
Milton and Melton are oftentelescoped forms of Middleton.
Enguerrand is telescoped to Ingram, though this may also come from the English form Ingelram.
When the saint's name begins with a consonant, we get, instead of aphesis, a telescoped pronunciation, e.
The short, telescoped fishing-rod she carried swung round her head and completed its next half-circle at the head of the reptile, even as it was about to strike.
She carried in one hand a fishing-rod which had been telescoped till it was no bigger than a cane; in the other she carried a small fishing-basket.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "telescoped" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.