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  1. Dictionary
    bush telegraph

    noun

    • 1. a rapid informal network by which information or gossip is spread: "the bush telegraph is one of the few things that works efficiently in Yangton"
  2. The idiom “bush telegraph” is a phrase that has been used for many years to describe a method of communication in remote areas. The term itself refers to the transmission of information through word-of-mouth, often over long distances.

  3. bush telegraph meaning: the informal way in which information quickly spreads from person to person. Learn more.

  4. noun. 1. any system of communication in which the inhabitants of a jungle or bush region transmit news rapidly, as by runners, drum codes, or smoke signals. 2. Austral. a. any chain of communications by which criminals, originally bushrangers, are warned of police movements. b. slang.

  5. ˌbush ˈtelegraph. the spreading of news quickly from one person to another: Everyone knew about it before it was officially announced: the bush telegraph had been at work again. Bush in this phrase refers to the areas of wild land in Australia.

  6. Bush telegraph definition: any system of communication in which the natives of a jungle or bush region transmit news rapidly, as by runners, drum codes, or smoke signals.. See examples of BUSH TELEGRAPH used in a sentence.

  7. Through the bush telegraph is an Australian phrase that means to receive a piece of information through informal channels, to learn something through gossip. Bush telegraph is modeled on the American term grapevine telegraph. The first known use of the phrase bush telegraph was in 1878.

  8. Jul 11, 2024 · In contemporary usage, ‘bush telegraph’ refers to the rapid spread of information, especially through informal channels. It’s like a grapevine, where news travels swiftly, often faster than official channels.