Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun Plural form of
monograph .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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Unfortunately, the social scientists who have studied these issues report their findings in monographs and professional journals written for their peers, not for general readers.
Think Progress » Young America’s Foundation Student Conference Bans Progressive Reporters 2006
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Five hundred word monographs on excrement do not meet the Bob Newhart international humor standards.
The QOHA: The Ominous Comma! Don Lewis 2008
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It is well known that for the genre of literary criticism, publishers are extremely reluctant to bring out what are called monographs-books devoted to a single author or a single work (unless that single author is Shakespeare or the single work is).
Claremont.org 2009
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Very few single volume 'monographs' of the work exist, being much more frequently compiled with other material into a miscellany.
Francesco Petrarca, De insigni obedientia et fide uxoria, ed. Albanese (1998) Miglior acque 2007
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Very few single volume 'monographs' of the work exist, being much more frequently compiled with other material into a miscellany.
Archive 2007-12-01 Miglior acque 2007
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Beyond this, the only Latin 'monographs' were minor and occasional.
Book & Print in New Zealand: A Guide to Print Culture in New Zealand Penny Griffith 1885
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In the two weeks prior to the attack, Roosevelt’s access to Japanese naval intercepts is documented by a series of radio intelligence bulletins, called monographs, that were prepared by McCollum.
DAY OF DECEIT ROBERT B. STINNETT 2001
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In the two weeks prior to the attack, Roosevelt’s access to Japanese naval intercepts is documented by a series of radio intelligence bulletins, called monographs, that were prepared by McCollum.
DAY OF DECEIT ROBERT B. STINNETT 2001
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In the two weeks prior to the attack, Roosevelt’s access to Japanese naval intercepts is documented by a series of radio intelligence bulletins, called monographs, that were prepared by McCollum.
DAY OF DECEIT ROBERT B. STINNETT 2001
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In the two weeks prior to the attack, Roosevelt’s access to Japanese naval intercepts is documented by a series of radio intelligence bulletins, called monographs, that were prepared by McCollum.
DAY OF DECEIT ROBERT B. STINNETT 2001
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