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The Boy Who Invented TV: The Boy Who Invented TV

This biography recounts the work of Philo Farnsworth, the first person to transmit a television image.
30 words 850 learners

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Full list of words from this list:

  1. haphazardly
    in a random manner
    What government leaders were doing in Washington, the latest in the arts and sciences, whether sports teams were winning or losing, new information of any kind—it trickled in haphazardly by mail.
  2. captivate
    attract; cause to be enamored
    Two new machines captivated Philo as he grew up. One was a hand-cranked telephone, purchased by a neighbor.
  3. bombard
    address continuously, as if with a barrage
    Each time the repairman came, Philo bombarded him with questions.
  4. tinker
    try to fix or mend in an unskilled manner
    Philo tinkered with broken motors, reels of wire, old tools.
  5. devise
    come up with after a mental effort
    He devised gadgets to hook up to the generator—anything to make his chores easier, like installing lights in the barn.
  6. churn
    stir cream vigorously in order to make butter
    So he attached a motor with pulleys to the lever to make it churn on its own, leaving him extra time to read.
  7. stimulate
    act to arouse action
    An article called “Pictures that Fly Through the Air” stimulated him.
  8. crude
    belonging to an early stage of technical development
    Scientists were having no luck—so far their ideas resulted in crude mechanical devices that used whirling disks and mirrors.
  9. fuse
    mix together different elements
    Then he almost fell off his plow seat. All his thoughts fused together.
  10. transmit
    broadcast over the airwaves, as in radio or television
    Instead of seeing rows of dirt, he saw a way to create television: breaking down images into parallel lines of light, capturing them and transmitting them as electrons, then reassembling them for a viewer.
  11. devour
    enjoy avidly
    Mr. Tolman, the senior chemistry teacher, noticed that this freshman devoured books the way other students ate popcorn.
  12. controversial
    marked by or capable of causing disagreement
    Philo’s latest hero was Albert Einstein, with his controversial new theory of relativity.
  13. relativity
    the theory that space and time are not absolute concepts
    Philo’s latest hero was Albert Einstein, with his controversial new theory of relativity.
  14. halting
    proceeding in a fragmentary, hesitant, or ineffective way
    Usually Philo spoke little, with a halting voice. But when he could share his knowledge of science, he was a different boy.
  15. boggle
    overcome with amazement
    His teacher was boggled.
  16. envision
    imagine, conceive of, or see in one's mind
    Philo ripped a page out of the notebook he always kept in his shirt pocket. He scribbled a diagram of an all-electric camera, the kind of converter he envisioned. An Image Dissector, he called it.
  17. bulky
    of large size for its weight
    On weekends he organized “radio parties” so his friends could gather around one of the bulky wooden cabinets and listen to the new stations.
  18. obsession
    an unhealthy and compulsive preoccupation with something
    Thanks to his obsession with television, Philo had already lost one girlfriend, who called him too much of a dreamer.
  19. dissect
    cut open or cut apart
    He met two California businessmen, and over dinner one night, he took them through a step-by-step explanation of his Image Dissector: a camera tube that would dissect an image into a stream of electrons, converting them into pulses of electrical current.
  20. ignorant
    uneducated in general; lacking knowledge or sophistication
    That was the best thing about television, he said—it would let families and whole communities share the same stories. By making people less ignorant of one another, he went on, it would teach and inspire. Maybe even lead to world peace.
  21. patent
    a document granting an inventor sole rights to an invention
    He filed for several government patents that would protect his ideas for the next seventeen years.
  22. precision
    the quality of being reproducible in amount or performance
    Pem learned to use a precision welder to make tube elements—everything had to be built from scratch.
  23. weld
    join together by heating
    Pem learned to use a precision welder to make tube elements—everything had to be built from scratch.
  24. unison
    the act of occurring together or simultaneously
    Finally they got the lights, wires, and tubes to work in unison.
  25. brainstorm
    a clear, often sudden understanding of a complex situation
    With his brainstorm in the potato field, Philo Farnsworth may have won the race to invent TV.
  26. priority
    status established in order of importance or urgency
    Then Justin Tolman, Philo’s proud high school teacher, came forward with that old notebook drawing. In 1934 the U.S. Patent Office awarded priority of invention to Farnsworth.
  27. disregard
    give little or no attention to
    RCA simply disregarded the ruling and debuted TV in 1939, at the World’s Fair in New York City.
  28. debut
    present for the first time to the public
    RCA simply disregarded the ruling and debuted TV in 1939, at the World’s Fair in New York City.
  29. simultaneously
    at the same instant
    By 1955 an estimated half of the population of America simultaneously watched the grand opening of Disneyland on TV.
  30. epitaph
    an inscription in memory of a buried person
    His epitaph reads, “He loved his fellow man.”
Created on Wed Dec 23 19:31:56 EST 2020 (updated Wed May 04 14:32:30 EDT 2022)

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