Get Free Checker

monograph

[ US /ˈmɑnəˌɡɹæf/ ]
[ UK /mˈɒnə‍ʊɡɹˌæf/ ]
NOUN
  1. a detailed and documented treatise on a particular subject

How To Use monograph In A Sentence

  • The rich Hettangian ammonite fauna first collected and recognized by Muller has been monographed by Guex.
  • The King is Dead is not a conventional scholarly monograph like those published by university presses and read by precious few. Times, Sunday Times
  • University presses still compete for many monographs, including revised dissertations, and, contrary to this belief, they pay advances for a significant number of them.
  • Callan finds a host of possibilities for this ‘punching’ process, including tapping Mac Zedong into Elvis in a Warhol monograph, and making layered, sculpturesque objects that look like topographical maps.
  • What I am now engaged on is the monograph of the _principal_ Southern Nebulæ, the object of which is to put on record every ascertainable particular of their actual appearance and the stars visible in them, so as to satisfy future observers whether _new stars_ have appeared, or changes taken place in the nebulosity. Personal Recollections, from Early Life to Old Age, of Mary Somerville
  • What about ‘non-traditional’ scholarship, which may appear in obscure peer-reviewed journals or specialized monographs.
  • What is probably the very first monograph ever devoted to Auriol deals with his conceptualism.
  • According to their monograph, it should not be used during pregnancy, by nursing mothers or by those with endogenous depression.
  • Bloom informs us that he wrote the monograph as a postlude to ‘Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human’.
  • Ololiuqui, Safford pronounced, was in fact Datura meteloides, a well-known and highly toxic hallucinogen belonging to a group of plants that, perhaps not entirely coincidentally, he had just monographed. One River
View all