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单词 monographic
释义

Definition of monographic in English:

monographic

adjective mɒnə(ʊ)ˈɡrafɪkˌmɑnəˈɡræfɪk
  • 1Relating to a monograph.

    专题性的,专著的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • With the appearance of monographic descriptions of the brachiopods and bivalves, Licharew determined the age of these deposits to be Late Permian.
    • Despite this attention and extensive monographic work, their phylogenetic history is still incompletely known.
    • The book is a comprehensive, very readable overview of its topic, based on the extensive monographic literature devoted to its wide subject matter.
    • My hope is that scholars and students will take up Tate's challenge to explore monographic and biographical subjects suggested by Frontier Army.
    • He has written the first monographic analysis of the complete corpus of the late Renaissance Calabrian friar and naturalist philosopher.
    • The writing is elegant, even polemical at times - a welcome break from the dry monographic tone that characterizes much of the internal improvement literature.
    • The specific purpose of the project was to identify and to microfilm monographic and serial literature relating to agricultural development and rural life between 1820 and 1945.
    • Despite the implication of the book's subtitle, McWilliam does not take a monographic approach either.
    • For a monographic treatment of a rich fossil site, the balance between data and evaluation is good.
    • Curiously, women figure very little in monographic work on the history of the senses.
    • Deserters have gone without monographic treatment for nearly seventy years.
    • Since the monographic study of permineralized microfossils in Doushantuo cherts and phosphorites, several reports of new microfossils and new localities have appeared in the literature.
    • Most academic publishers have not adopted technology as widely as their library counterparts due to the nature of monographic literature and because of the financial constraints.
    • The online searches and site visits also uncovered 927 monographic titles and 170 serial titles held outside Auburn University.
    • It must combine monographic depth with multivariate confrontations of different social, cultural and national contexts, through the transfer of problematics beyond national territories.
    • In monographic detail, the book covers the terrestrial birds in the Quaternary of New Zealand, treating moa, kiwi, waterbirds, raptors, rails, shorebirds, and the remaining land birds in turn.
    • Although Cooper authored many short papers, this monographic compendium was the first of what were to be many hallmarks of his career.
    • He continued collecting for several more years, but apparently put off monographic treatment until after his thesis was completed.
    • Also, its ample (if not completely exhaustive) footnotes are a good guide to the recent monographic literature in Italian, French, and English.
    • Nearly all the illustrated species in standard monographic works are less than 3 cm in carapace width.
    1. 1.1 (of an art gallery or exhibition) showing the works of a single artist.
      (艺术展览)个人的,单一艺术家作品的
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Top honors for a national monographic museum show went to ‘Kazimir Malevich: Suprematism,’ organized by the Menil Collection and the Guggenhelm Museum.
      • The museum, stuck in its own magnificent rut of monographic shows on modern masters, knew it was losing the next generation.
      • In 1909 and 1911 he offered huge monographic exhibitions of works by Ignacio Zuloaga and Joaquín Sorolla.
      • Szeemann occasionally curated monographic exhibitions, among them the Centre Pompidou's 1993 retrospective of Joseph Beuys.
      • This artist's first monographic exhibition in the U.S. brings together 45 of the 17th-century Dutch painter's canvases, including renowned interior and genre scenes and incisive portraits.
      • It is all the more surprising, therefore, to discover that there has never been a major monographic exhibition of El Greco's work in this country.
      • Though acknowledged in his day by Degas as ‘the greatest living master’, Menzel has never been the subject of a monographic exhibition in London.
      • The nonprofit A.R.T. gallery, which closed in 2004, presented monographic and group shows, giving exposure to a wide range of artists, with a notable commitment to showing women artists.
      • Although he was often referred to thus during his lifetime, he was baptised ‘Jean-Simeon’, and since the major monographic show devoted to him in 1979 the correct nomenclature has generally been adopted.
      • That is why a straightforward monographic exhibition such as this, giving us the opportunity to see Gainsborough on his own terms and in a noncontextual way, can be so valuable.
      • At his death in 1999 he bequeathed all the works of art in his studio to the Portland Museum of Art, where a monographic exhibition is on view through January 29, 2006.
      • The show was relatively large for a monographic exhibition, with fifty-five drawings attributed to Bruegel and sixty-two prints after his designs.
      • Because of my own long-standing interest in John Townsend (we are planning a monographic exhibition of his work), I was quick to suggest the dining table.
      • In 1880-1881, soon after Gifford's death, the museum honored him with an exhibition of his work, which had the distinction of being the first monographic show mounted at the museum.
      • Then came the major monographic show of 1990 in Venice and Washington, whose catalogue boasted no fewer than seventy-seven entries.
      • Not only the monographic display but also the group show, staged to reveal the artistic accomplishments of a particular region, now came to the fore.
      • In New York venues, top honors for the best monographic museum show went to the Dieter Roth retrospective.
      • Her work is the subject of a monographic exhibition at the Friends of Historic Kingston Museum in Kingston, New York, which may be seen until October 5.
      • This was a highly unusual event because it was a monographic presentation of work by a living foreign artist.
      • The Gerhard Richter survey at the Museum of Modern Art won top honors for best monographic museum show in New York.

Rhymes

autobiographic, autographic, bibliographic, biographic, calligraphic, cartographic, choreographic, cinematographic, cryptographic, demographic, geographic, graphic, hagiographic, historiographic, holographic, hydrographic, iconographic, lithographic, orthographic, palaeographic (US paleographic), photographic, pictographic, pornographic, reprographic, Sapphic, seraphic, stenographic, telegraphic, traffic, typographic, xerographic

Definition of monographic in US English:

monographic

adjectiveˌmɑnəˈɡræfɪkˌmänəˈɡrafik
  • 1Relating to a monograph.

    专题性的,专著的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • For a monographic treatment of a rich fossil site, the balance between data and evaluation is good.
    • Most academic publishers have not adopted technology as widely as their library counterparts due to the nature of monographic literature and because of the financial constraints.
    • With the appearance of monographic descriptions of the brachiopods and bivalves, Licharew determined the age of these deposits to be Late Permian.
    • The writing is elegant, even polemical at times - a welcome break from the dry monographic tone that characterizes much of the internal improvement literature.
    • Nearly all the illustrated species in standard monographic works are less than 3 cm in carapace width.
    • It must combine monographic depth with multivariate confrontations of different social, cultural and national contexts, through the transfer of problematics beyond national territories.
    • The online searches and site visits also uncovered 927 monographic titles and 170 serial titles held outside Auburn University.
    • Although Cooper authored many short papers, this monographic compendium was the first of what were to be many hallmarks of his career.
    • Also, its ample (if not completely exhaustive) footnotes are a good guide to the recent monographic literature in Italian, French, and English.
    • The book is a comprehensive, very readable overview of its topic, based on the extensive monographic literature devoted to its wide subject matter.
    • The specific purpose of the project was to identify and to microfilm monographic and serial literature relating to agricultural development and rural life between 1820 and 1945.
    • Curiously, women figure very little in monographic work on the history of the senses.
    • He has written the first monographic analysis of the complete corpus of the late Renaissance Calabrian friar and naturalist philosopher.
    • Despite this attention and extensive monographic work, their phylogenetic history is still incompletely known.
    • My hope is that scholars and students will take up Tate's challenge to explore monographic and biographical subjects suggested by Frontier Army.
    • Since the monographic study of permineralized microfossils in Doushantuo cherts and phosphorites, several reports of new microfossils and new localities have appeared in the literature.
    • Despite the implication of the book's subtitle, McWilliam does not take a monographic approach either.
    • He continued collecting for several more years, but apparently put off monographic treatment until after his thesis was completed.
    • Deserters have gone without monographic treatment for nearly seventy years.
    • In monographic detail, the book covers the terrestrial birds in the Quaternary of New Zealand, treating moa, kiwi, waterbirds, raptors, rails, shorebirds, and the remaining land birds in turn.
    1. 1.1 (of an art gallery or exhibition) showing the works of a single artist.
      (艺术展览)个人的,单一艺术家作品的
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In New York venues, top honors for the best monographic museum show went to the Dieter Roth retrospective.
      • That is why a straightforward monographic exhibition such as this, giving us the opportunity to see Gainsborough on his own terms and in a noncontextual way, can be so valuable.
      • The nonprofit A.R.T. gallery, which closed in 2004, presented monographic and group shows, giving exposure to a wide range of artists, with a notable commitment to showing women artists.
      • In 1909 and 1911 he offered huge monographic exhibitions of works by Ignacio Zuloaga and Joaquín Sorolla.
      • The show was relatively large for a monographic exhibition, with fifty-five drawings attributed to Bruegel and sixty-two prints after his designs.
      • At his death in 1999 he bequeathed all the works of art in his studio to the Portland Museum of Art, where a monographic exhibition is on view through January 29, 2006.
      • Szeemann occasionally curated monographic exhibitions, among them the Centre Pompidou's 1993 retrospective of Joseph Beuys.
      • This artist's first monographic exhibition in the U.S. brings together 45 of the 17th-century Dutch painter's canvases, including renowned interior and genre scenes and incisive portraits.
      • In 1880-1881, soon after Gifford's death, the museum honored him with an exhibition of his work, which had the distinction of being the first monographic show mounted at the museum.
      • Not only the monographic display but also the group show, staged to reveal the artistic accomplishments of a particular region, now came to the fore.
      • Although he was often referred to thus during his lifetime, he was baptised ‘Jean-Simeon’, and since the major monographic show devoted to him in 1979 the correct nomenclature has generally been adopted.
      • This was a highly unusual event because it was a monographic presentation of work by a living foreign artist.
      • Top honors for a national monographic museum show went to ‘Kazimir Malevich: Suprematism,’ organized by the Menil Collection and the Guggenhelm Museum.
      • Her work is the subject of a monographic exhibition at the Friends of Historic Kingston Museum in Kingston, New York, which may be seen until October 5.
      • Though acknowledged in his day by Degas as ‘the greatest living master’, Menzel has never been the subject of a monographic exhibition in London.
      • Then came the major monographic show of 1990 in Venice and Washington, whose catalogue boasted no fewer than seventy-seven entries.
      • The museum, stuck in its own magnificent rut of monographic shows on modern masters, knew it was losing the next generation.
      • It is all the more surprising, therefore, to discover that there has never been a major monographic exhibition of El Greco's work in this country.
      • The Gerhard Richter survey at the Museum of Modern Art won top honors for best monographic museum show in New York.
      • Because of my own long-standing interest in John Townsend (we are planning a monographic exhibition of his work), I was quick to suggest the dining table.
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