释义 |
monographic, a. and n.|mɒnəʊˈgræfɪk| [f. mono- + -graphic; in senses 1 and 2 after monogram; in sense 4 after monography; cf. F. monographique.] A. adj. †1. = monogrammic 1. Obs.
1731Bailey, Monographick Picture, a Picture only drawn in Lines without Colours. 1859Gullick & Timbs Paint. 38 The monographic style [of painting in Greece] consisted also of lines, but the inner lines or markings were given as well as the exterior outline. 2. = monogrammic 2.
1888Harper's Mag. Apr. 746 A monographic combination of the letters A and P. 1890in Century Dict. 3. Representing a sphere in a single diagram.
1855Rep. Brit. Assoc., Sections 148 On Improved Monographic Projections of the World. By James Gall. 4. Pertaining to or of the nature of a monograph.
1825Good Study Med. (ed. 2) II. 547 The monographic and clinical writers of our own country. 1869W. S. Dallas tr. Müller's Facts for Darwin x. 106 A Monographic Memoir. 1899Allbutt's Syst. Med. VI. 205 Material for..monographic treatment. 1959C. Singer Short Hist. Sci. Ideas vii. 274 The earliest modern scientific works of a monographic character, the great books of Belon, Rondelet, Vesalius, Gesner, are exclusively biological. 1970Daily Tel. 12 Sept. 8/5 There is Waterhouse's monograph on Gainsborough..and some exhibition catalogues that are monographic in their range. 1974Nature 18 Jan. 165/3 The book as a whole usefully fills an important gap in the monographic literature. †B. n. pl. Writings treating a subject monographically. Obs.
1768Pennant Zool. (1776) I. 342 The curious monographics on the swallow tribe of that worthy correspondent. |