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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
monograph
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ VERB
write
▪ Posidonius wrote a monograph about the Oceans.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Furthermore, a monograph of any large tropical group will show varying degrees of recognition of the ecological requirements of different species.
▪ Her monograph, Colour in Nature, appeared in 1898.
▪ The monographs should: Introduce the concepts of clean technology to academic and industrial practitioners.
▪ The main strength of this sort of monograph is its potential for detailed interpretation.
▪ These men did much to make my monograph tolerable.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Monograph

Monograph \Mon"o*graph\, n. [Mono- + -graph.] A written account or description of a single thing, or class of things; a special treatise on a particular subject of limited range.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
monograph

"treatise on a single subject," 1821, from mono- + -graph "something written." Earlier was monography (1773).

Wiktionary
monograph

n. A scholarly book or a treatise on a single subject or a group of related subjects, usually written by one person. vb. (context transitive English) To write a monograph on (a subject).

WordNet
monograph

n. a detailed and documented treatise on a particular subject

Wikipedia
Monograph

A monograph is a specialist work of writing (in contrast to reference works) on a single subject or an aspect of a subject, usually by a single author.

Monograph (band)

Monograph was a London based indie rock band that began recording music in 1995 and broke up in 2000.

Monograph released one album and three singles on Matt Haynes' (ex- Sarah Records) Shinkansen Recordings label between 1998 and 2000. Their vocalist and guitarist, Rob Crutchley, was also the main songwriter and their records were produced by Broken Dog’s guitarist Clive Painter, with that band's Martine Roberts also guesting on several songs. A self-titled mini-album was issued under the alias Pacific Radio in 2000, while a subsequent album entitled 'Everything Is In The Past' remains unreleased. Early supporters of the band included Steve Lamacq, Gideon Coe and Sean Hughes. The BBC Radio 1 DJ John Peel played songs from each of their releases and the band recorded a Peel session in 1999 (the first act on the Shinkansen roster to do so).Rob also took part in two live John Peel Christmas Specials with Broken Dog at Maida Vale and Peel Acres.

Usage examples of "monograph".

Through innumerable prefaces, postfaces, notes, biographies and monographs, university lectures and dissertations, Kafkology produces and sustains its own image of Kafka, to the point where the author whom readers know by the name Kafka is no longer Kafka but the Kafkologized Kafka.

Campbell, in his celebrated monograph, in a total of 51 operations had only seen recorded the accounts of two children saved, and one of these was too marvelous to believe.

Such monographs were only in later times collected in encyclopaedic works, in which they were inserted in such a manner as to constitute various chapters only, and no longer separate treatises.

It was Fields who had recognized genius in half-finished manuscripts and monographs, Fields who had nurtured friendships with the great New England authors as other publishers closed their doors for lack of profits or spent too much time retailing.

Years after, I remember, I read a monograph on grieving that studied bereaved children and found that many thought their mothers had moved away, gone to a new house, a new life, new children.

His plays, if I may be pardoned for coining a word, need not an omnigraph, but monographs.

Federation had been on the planet, the ethnologists and anthropologists should have published enough monographs to fill a small library!

Museum monographs and chapbooks, perhaps: removed for research, then not returned?

De Quincey, whose acute and in many respects most valuable monograph on the poet touches its point of least trustworthiness in matters of this kind, declares roundly, and on the alleged authority of Coleridge himself, that the very primary and essential prerequisite of happiness was wanting to the union.

After the decades that the Federation had been on the planet, the ethnologists and anthropologists should have published enough monographs to fill a small library!

The drawers were filled with notebooks, folders and monographs on roses.

Harry Whittington, and fellow graduate student Derek Briggs, Conway Morris spent the next several years making a systematic revision of the entire collection, and cranking out one exciting monograph after another as discovery piled upon discovery.

Ernest Jones, whom time would reveal as the most loyal of Freud's lieutenants, had written his classic study of Hamlet and his splendid monograph on The Nightmare.

He would have traded ten thousand costumed autograph hounds for one gilt-edged monograph on “Dungannon’s Use of Celtic Mythology in Contemporary Fantasy.

FAQs (Frequent Answers and Questions regarding almost every technical matter in the world), e-zines (electronic versions of magazines, not a very profitable pursuit), the electronic versions of dailies (together with on-line news and information services), reference and other e-books, monographs, articles and minutes of discussions ("threads"), among other types of material.