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View definitions for teleport

teleport

verb as in travel without physically crossing the distance

Strongest match

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Example Sentences

Giannis Antetokounmpo, who often teleports from halfcourt to the rim with a single dribble and somehow produces in the paint like Shaq despite having a Stretch Armstrong-like elasticity.

Players’ hands float in midair as they vault across virtual space, crudely teleporting from point to point.

He’s a preternaturally instinctual defender, and at times he appears gifted with the ability to teleport into passing lanes.

A Swiss group, for example, used China’s data to synthesize SARS-CoV-2’s entire genome in the lab, essentially instantly teleporting it into their hands without having to wait for physical samples.

Sneaky spheresA classic gimmick, Murphy’s Cup and Balls lets quick-handed performers “teleport” wool orbs between aluminum containers as they slide them around a table.

They're just finding out their powers—one is a telepath, another levitates, a third is a teleport.

We'll need more televisor machines, more teleport machines, some for use on Mars and Venus, others for the Jovian moons.

He could teleport parts from it; he could hold other parts more tightly together by using the same power.

If the same rule holds for the aliens as for us, I don't think they would have time to teleport it away.

Malone thought, if you put handcuffs on a teleport, would the handcuffs vanish when the teleport did?

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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

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