The Collaborative International Dictionary
Photograph \Pho"to*graph\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Photographed; p. pr. & vb. n. Photographing.] To take a picture or likeness of by means of photography; as, to photograph a view; to photograph a group.
He makes his pen drawing on white paper, and they are
afterwards photographed on wood.
--Hamerton.
Note: Also used figuratively.
He is photographed on my mind.
--Lady D.
Hardy.
Wiktionary
vb. (en-past of: photograph)
Usage examples of "photographed".
In the next decades his grave, impassive face, topped by the tall-crowned hat, would be painted by four white artists and photographed by many daguerreotypists, so that the deep lines down his cheeks would become familiar across the country, and he would represent the archetypal Indian chief, the man of unshakable integrity.
Except for a few attempts with established stage favorites, photographed generally in screen versions of theatrical classics and backed by affiliations with the producers of the legitimate stage, Continent Films was the first concern to make the five-reel feature.
He was endeavoring to reproduce the action which had been photographed, so as to determine just how the poison had been administered.
Now I want the scenes up to thirteen put together in proper order, first as photographed by one camera, then as caught by the other.
To do so it is necessary that certain photographed scenes be projected on the screen and that certain other matters be made perfectly clear.
Before the camera man stopped, Manton rushed in and was photographed bending over her.
And she has earned her living by allowing herself to be photographed in—immodest costumes.
They photographed Sheriff Judson in his office, in front of the jail, and standing beside the police car.
They drove over to Charlie Hodges' and photographed Sheriff Judson, and Will Sims, standing beside the murdered man.
And there were forty-two campers to be photographed in the morning at Triple-Oaks Camp.
Forty-two campers were photographed, one by one, poised on the diving board.
Then forty-two campers were lined up and photographed beside their tents.
He didn't bother to think about forty-two campers being photographed, or about five escaped convicts hidden in the shanty, or about the widow Silton, Uncle Fred, Clancy, Henny, or even the date he had at two o'clock.
Off to one side in the picture, photographed by accident, stands Lieutenant Pasquinel Mercy, whom she has not yet met.
He wore formal clothes, including striped pants, even when at work on a dig, and although he had been photographed numerous times at various dramatic excavations, he was never shown without a top hat.