People used a telephone to communicate with people in the area and wrote letters to long-distance friends and relatives. People still relied on newspapers and the radio for news in the 1950s.
It depends entirely on how you are encountering this person (long-distance or in-person), whether you share languages or have some degree of mutual intelligibility, and whether you have a simple or complex idea to communicate.
they had messengers walk to the destination. this could have taken up to 100 messengers to get one message delivered
People could communicate quickly over long distances.
People could communicate quickly over long distances.
To communicate with other people over a long distance.
It helped people communicate without traveling a long distance.
to communicate from long distance relatives
allowed people to communicate long distance by transmitting electric messages over wires.
You didn't
For long distance travel, most people of the early 1900's used trains, but for shorter distances, horses and buggys were more common, along with an occasional car.
e-mail or texting
roar
They communicated using language. I am honestly not sure what you are asking. Are you talking about long distance communications? Are you talking about the way in which language was employed by a specific people at the time? Be specific!
People used a telephone to communicate with people in the area and wrote letters to long-distance friends and relatives. People still relied on newspapers and the radio for news in the 1950s.
Telegraph cables- in use since l858 Cyrus Field the principal engineer involved.
They couldn't have used a phonograph because that was after lincolns time but they could have written letters,