apograph

Related to apograph: Apocryphal

apograph

(ˈæpəˌɡrɑːf; ˈæpəˌɡræf)
n
a perfect copy or transcript
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
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References in periodicals archive ?
The same is applied to the reporting of the readings of F's most important apograph, [phi] ([phi], [[phi].sup.1], [[phi].sup.2] and [[phi].sup.x]).
Mrs Taylor (below) said the new computer equipment had been given to them by Market Harborough firm Apograph to help sales over Christmas.
The third, the codex domesticus or poggianus, Daneloni cannot identify with certainty but believes was an apograph of the celebrated exemplar Poggii, as Poliziano asserted, which had absorbed some fifteenth-century contamination.
What is to be interpreted in terms of reality is its reflection that arrives as a mere transcript or apograph: a writing of distance that out of necessity inscribes itself off and away from the original script or graph.
Decisions are frequently based on style analysis and on the position of works within apograph manuscript anthologies of uncertain provenance - both highly equivocal forms of evidence.
The source used by Nicholas would have been an apograph of F taken to Constantinople, where it would have served Cinnamus as his model.
The text posed particular challenges, being available only in an incomplete and poorly transmitted form in a codex unicus held in Mysore (and an apograph in two codices), plus a number of testimonia, especially from Ksemaraja's Svacchandatantroddyota.
[36] This fragment first appeared in the Ricci apograph, a manuscript compiled almost entirely by a grandson of Machiavelli, Giuliano de' Ricci.