[f. as prec.]
1. trans. To print from stone; to produce by a lithographic process; in first quot. to make a lithographic portrait of. Also absol. or intr.
1825. Hone, Every-day Bk., I. 1457. This personage has obtained himself to be sketched and lithographed.
1853. Sir H. Douglas, Milit. Bridges (ed. 3), 93. Of this work, the part relating to bridges was, in 1850, lithographed at the Royal Engineer Establishment at Chatham.
1859. Lang, Wand. India, 235. This native print was lithographed in the Oordoo language.
2. To write or engrave on stone. rare.
1872. J. Fergusson, Rude Stone Mon., 73. If they could have written to any primeval Times, they would not have taken such pains to lithograph their victory on the spot.
Hence Lithographed ppl. a.
183941. S. Warren, Ten Thous. a Year, III. 407. A lithographed likeness of his odious face.
1851. Illustr. Catal. Gt. Exhib., 1213. Specimens of gilt, lithographed, and coloured borders.
1880. V. Ball, Jungle Life India, xii. 535. I bought several lithographed books in the Urdu language.
1890. Athenæum, 21 June, 802/3. It is proposed to publish in lithographed facsimile a manuscript volume of recipes.