1A radio wave of a wavelength between about 10 and 100 m (and a frequency of about 3 to 30 MHz)
短波
as modifiera short-wave transmitter
短波发射机。
1.1mass nounBroadcasting using radio waves of between 10 and 100 m wavelength.
短波广播
as modifiershort-wave radio
短波无线电广播。
Example sentencesExamples
All Church Services from Ballina-Boher parish are broadcast on short-wave radio.
Those who listened to international radio broadcasts will recall the ebb and flow of the short-wave signal as it made its way from the other side of the planet.
Records show that, on opening, it had space for 21 police vehicles, including 14 equipped with short-wave radios.
And the closest he can get to his family at Christmas is an e-mail sent from his expedition computer, a short wave radio message or, at best, a brief call on his mobile phone.
From 1936 onwards short-wave radio stations replaced the posts on the Yukon Telegraph line.
Next time they must plan better, with short wave transmitters.
The first was the short-wave transmitter, which could be used to communicate at great distances but was small enough to fit into an aircraft or tank.
The large sweep we had with that one short wave transmitter doesn't exist any more.
Overseas short-wave transmission wasn't reliable enough to send live commentary back to Australia.
With telephone connections so difficult from Arecibo, Hulse used the observatory's short-wave radio link to Cornell University.
Jim carried a tiny short-wave radio, but in these high valleys we could hear only Chinese and Russian voices.
I was lying in my tent and heard the news on my short-wave radio from the BBC World Service.
I was sharing a tent with John Hunt and set up a short-wave radio to listen to the Met Office weather report.
US officials were convinced their electronic eavesdropping devices had picked up his voice on a short-wave radio.
Earlier tonight, I had them bring you a short-wave radio.
Everything was censored and she relied on the BBC, broadcast through her short-wave radio, for real news from the outside world.
In devastated areas, short-wave radios are likely to be more common and reliable than Internet connections.
I mean, think about the ban on short-wave radio.
Eminent mathematicians once claimed to prove logically that short-wave radio was impossible.
She purchased a short-wave radio to listen to ‘Radio Hanoi,’ a Hanoi station that could be picked-up through a relay in Cuba, to collect any possible information.