telly
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++tel·ly /ˈteli/ ●○○ noun (plural tellies) [countable, uncountable] British English informal
TCBDHTELEVISION/RADIOtelevision 电视;电视机on telly Is there anything good on telly tonight? 今晚电视上有什么好节目吗?
Examples from the Corpus
telly• If he didn't become a telly millionaire turning out musical trash they could be flogged for a few pounds.• If they think of history, it may be hard not to see it in dressing-up terms from telly watching.• We've just bought a new telly.• And the only man in a dress on telly was Les Dawson.• There was a lovely picture of him on telly last night peering woefully over the fence dressed in snazzy suit.• But what would we watch on telly when bowlers finished matches early?• It was back to square one: telly 24 hours a day.• That Aussie on the telly championing the Outback is merely praising its warm-weather virtue.• They work so well in most of his sharp, documentary-style insights on the telly.• It's true, I saw it on some show on the telly.• You can watch telly after you've done your homework.Origin telly (1900-2000) televisiontel·ly nounChineseSyllable
Corpus television
telly
tel‧ly S2 /ˈteli/
noun (plural tellies) [uncountable and countable] British English informal
television
on telly
Is there anything good on telly tonight?
tel‧ly S2 /ˈteli/
noun (plural tellies) [uncountable and countable] British English informal Date: 1900-2000
Origin: television
Origin: television

television
on telly