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gramophone

 - 3 dictionary results

gram⋅o⋅phone

[gram-uh-fohn]
–noun
a phonograph.

Origin:
1887; orig. a trademark; appar. inversion of phonogram now obs. name for a phonographic cylinder


gram⋅o⋅phon⋅ic [gram-uh-fon-ik] , gram⋅o⋅phon⋅i⋅cal, adjective
gram⋅o⋅phon⋅i⋅cal⋅ly, adverb
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
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gram·o·phone   (grām'ə-fōn')   
n.  A record player; a phonograph.

[Originally a trademark.]
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Word Origin & History

Gramophone 
1887, trademark by German-born U.S. inventor Emil Berliner (1851-1929), an inversion of phonogram (1884) "the tracing made by a phonograph needle," coined from Gk. phone "voice, sound" (see fame) + gramma "something written." Berliner's machine used a flat disc and succeeded with the public. Edison's phonograph used a cylinder and did not. Despised by linguistic purists (Weekley calls gramophone "An atrocity formed by reversing phonogram") who tried to at least amend it to grammophone, it was replaced by record player after mid-1950s.
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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