释义 |
stereograph, n.|ˈstɛriːəʊˌgrɑːf, -æ-| [f. stereo- + -graph.] 1. A picture (or pair of pictures) representing the object so that it appears (or may be made to appear) solid, a stereoscopic photograph.
1859Atlantic Monthly June 743 We have now obtained the double-eyed or twin pictures, or Stereograph, if we may coin a name. 1859Jephson Brittany i. 6 Making stereographs of any object of interest. 1862Weldon's Reg. Nov. 165/1 The stereographs of the full moon taken by Mr. Delarue show that our satellite deviates very considerably from the spherical form. a1876M. Collins Pen Sk. (1879) II. 96 His [Borrow's] vivid style seems to act on common⁓place objects as the stereoscope on the stereograph; it gives them a solidness and reality. 2. An instrument for making projections or geometrical drawings of skulls or similar solid objects.
1877Catal. Spec. Collect. Sci. Apparatus S. Kens. Mus. (ed. 3) 956 Craniograph, by M. Broca. Stereograph, by M. Broca. 1878Bartley tr. Topinard's Anthrop. ii. iii. 268 The stereograph..gives..all the visible details, as well as some inaccessible to the eye, and is applied to each of the five surfaces of the skull which it is useful to reproduce. 3. An apparatus for making embossed points in metal plates in a system of printing for the blind.
1896Living Topics Mag. (N.Y.) Feb. 131 Mr. Wait..brought out in 1894..the stereograph, by which they [the blind] can emboss metal plates for printing in embossed characters. Hence ˈstereoˌgraph v., trans., to take a stereograph or stereoscopic photograph of.
1860O. W. Holmes Prof. Breakfast-t. viii, Having been photographed, and stereographed. |