[ad. (perh. through Fr. apographe) Gr. ἀπόγραφ-ον a copy, f. ἀπο-γράφ-ειν to write off, copy.] An exact copy or transcript.
1601. Holland, Pliny (1634), II. 546. The counterfeit taken from this table and made by it (which kind of pattern the Greekes call Apographon).
1656. Blount, Glossogr., Apograph, a copy written out of another pattern; also an Inventory of ones goods.
1875. Poste, Gaius, Pref. 8. An apograph or facsimile edition of the Veronese MS.
1878. Garland, Genesis, Pref. p. viii. The largest number of these early copies was made, not from the original manuscripts, but from the apographs.