intransitive verb.
To slide or pass one within another, after the manner of the sections of a small telescope or spyglass; to come into collision, as railway cars, in such a manner that one runs into another; to become compressed in the manner of a telescope, due to a collision or other force.
transitive verb.
To cause to come into collision, so as to telescope.
transitive verb.
to shorten or abridge significantly.
adjective.
Capable of being extended or compacted, like a telescope, by the sliding of joints or parts one within the other; telescopic
noun.
An optical instrument used in viewing distant objects, as the heavenly bodies.
noun.
See under Achromatic.
noun.
a telescope having an aplanatic eyepiece.
noun.
a telescope which has a simple eyepiece so constructed or used as not to reverse the image formed by the object glass, and consequently exhibits objects inverted, which is not a hindrance in astronomical observations.
noun.
a reflecting telescope invented by Cassegrain, which differs from the Gregorian only in having the secondary speculum convex instead of concave, and placed nearer the large speculum. The Cassegrainian represents objects inverted; the Gregorian, in their natural position. The Melbourne telescope (see Illust. under Reflecting telescope, below) is a Cassegrainian telescope.
noun.
See under Dialytic.
noun.
See the Note under Equatorial.
noun.
a refracting telescope in which the eyeglass is a concave instead of a convex lens, as in the common opera glass. This was the construction originally adopted by Galileo, the inventor of the instrument. It exhibits the objects erect, that is, in their natural positions.
noun.
a form of reflecting telescope. See under Gregorian.
noun.
a reflecting telescope of the form invented by Sir William Herschel, in which only one speculum is employed, by means of which an image of the object is formed near one side of the open end of the tube, and to this the eyeglass is applied directly.
noun.
a form of reflecting telescope. See under Newtonian.
noun.
a telescope specially constructed to make photographs of the heavenly bodies.
noun.
See Teinoscope.
noun.
a telescope in which the image is formed by a speculum or mirror (or usually by two speculums, a large one at the lower end of the telescope, and the smaller one near the open end) instead of an object glass. See Gregorian, Cassegrainian, Herschelian, and Newtonian, telescopes, above.
noun.
a telescope in which the image is formed by refraction through an object glass.
noun.
the telescope fish.
noun.
a monstrous variety of the goldfish having very protuberant eyes.
noun.
any two-winged fly of the genus Diopsis, native of Africa and Asia. The telescope flies are remarkable for having the eyes raised on very long stalks.
noun.
an elongated gastropod (Cerithium telescopium) having numerous flattened whorls.
noun.
a slender telescope attached to the barrel, having cross wires in the eyepiece and used as a sight.
noun.
a telescope whose eyepiece has one or two lenses more than the astronomical, for the purpose of inverting the image, and exhibiting objects erect.