[f. LITHO- + -GRAPH (or a back-formation from LITHOGRAPHY).]

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  1.  A lithographic print. Also attrib.

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1839.  Miss Mitford, in L’Estrange, Life (1870), III. vii. 98. We have an exquisite lithograph of Lucas’s portrait of my father.

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1846.  N. F. Moore, Hist. Sk. Columbia Coll., 23. These streets, probably, like those of many lithograph cities of recent date, existed only upon paper.

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1868.  G. Duff, Pol. Surv., 179. Melancholy lithographs represent to us a long-faced, square-browed man.

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  2.  An inscription on stone. nonce-use.

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1859.  Whittier, ‘The Rock’ in El Ghor, iv. The graven wonders pay No tribute to the spoiler, Time! Unchanged the awful lithograph Of power and glory undertrod.

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