[ad. (perh. through Fr. apographe) Gr. ἀπόγραφ-ον a copy, f. ἀπο-γράφ-ειν to write off, copy.] An exact copy or transcript.

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1601.  Holland, Pliny (1634), II. 546. The counterfeit taken from this table and made by it (which kind of pattern the Greekes call Apographon).

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1656.  Blount, Glossogr., Apograph, a copy written out of another pattern; also an Inventory of ones goods.

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1875.  Poste, Gaius, Pref. 8. An apograph or facsimile edition of the Veronese MS.

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1878.  Garland, Genesis, Pref. p. viii. The largest number of these early copies was made, not from the original manuscripts, but from the apographs.

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