French telephone

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

In the early 20th century, telephones with handsets were not common in the United States. Many American soldiers encountered them in France during World War I.

Noun[edit]

French telephone (plural French telephones)

  1. (US, telephony, dated) A telephone with a handset.
    • 1933, Pennsylvania. General Assembly. Senate, Journal (part 1, page 281)
      An act prohibiting telephone corporations of this Commonwealth from imposing, for the use of hand telephones commonly called 'French telephones,' a charge in excess of fifteen cents per month []
    • 1999, Rudi Voti, The Facts On File Encyclopedia of Science, Technology, and Society, page 1012:
      Rotary dials also were used on the so-called "French" telephones introduced in Europe at first and then the United States in the late 1920s.