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Definition of Phonograph needle
1. Noun. A stylus that formerly made sound by following a groove in a phonograph record.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Phonograph Needle
Literary usage of Phonograph needle
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Motion Picture Making and Exhibiting: A Comprehensive Volume Treating the by John B. Rathbun (1914)
"The jumping of the phonograph needle will land it in a groove either behind or
in advance of the projector and again make adjustment necessary. ..."
2. The American Rose Annual by American Rose Society (1920)
"Caroline Testout rose by inserting in them the usual phonograph needle so as to
give him something he can fasten in the needle-holder. ..."
3. The American Rose Annual by American Rose Society (1920)
"Caroline Testout rose by inserting in them the usual phonograph needle so as to
give him something he can fasten in the needle-holder. ..."
4. Journal of Applied Psychology by American Psychological Association, American Association for Applied Psychology (1918)
"The Company also makes high grade steels of special analyses from which it produces
telegraph wire, piano wire, rope wire, phonograph needle wire and motor ..."
5. Proceedings of the American Society for Psychical Research by American Society for Psychical Research (1911)
"The control during this anaesthesia had pushed a phonograph needle into her flesh
until it stood alone and asked the sitter to examine it under the light. ..."
6. Moving Pictures: How They are Made and Worked by Frederick Arthur Ambrose Talbot (1914)
"The differential, however, provides a means of correcting any accidental displacement
of the phonograph needle when reproduction is carried out. ..."