[f. LITHO- + -GRAPH (or a back-formation from LITHOGRAPHY).]
1. A lithographic print. Also attrib.
1839. Miss Mitford, in LEstrange, Life (1870), III. vii. 98. We have an exquisite lithograph of Lucass portrait of my father.
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.
1868. G. Duff, Pol. Surv., 179. Melancholy lithographs represent to us a long-faced, square-browed man.
2. An inscription on stone. nonce-use.
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.