¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Polygraphists
1. polygraphist [n] - See also: polygraphist
Lexicographical Neighbors of Polygraphists
Literary usage of Polygraphists
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Monthly Review by Ralph Griffiths (1829)
"... and dramatists; of critics, adage-collectors, letter writers, and polygraphists :
by these we mean those who have written on such various subjects, ..."
2. The World's Congress of Representative Women: A Historical Résumé for by May Wright Sewall (1894)
"_ 10 polygraphists 13 In several industries the number of women workers preponderates
even. Married women employed in all factories, excepting the spinning ..."
3. A Complete History of the Popes of Rome: From Saint Peter, the First Bishop by Louis-Marie de Lahaye Cormenin (1859)
"The number of his writings assures lo him the title of the most fruitful of the
ancient polygraphists. His works form twenty-one folio volumes ; the first ..."
4. Museums, Libraries, and Picture Galleries, Public and Private: Their by John Woody Papworth, Wyatt Angelicus Van Sandau Papworth (1853)
"polygraphists, 453. i. Collections and extracts, 116. v. History.—a. Prolegomena,
1866. fo. Universal, ancient and modern history, 71. c. ..."
5. Directory of Criminal Justice Information Sources by DIANE Publishing Company (1994)
"Arther, Director Journal of Polygraph Science is restricted to polygraphists.
The National Training Center of Polygraph Science's goal is to advance the ..."
6. Nugæ literariæ: prose and verse by Richard Winter Hamilton (1841)
"It is, indeed, but justice to the monasteries to record that they were the best
sanctuaries, and their inmates the most active polygraphists, in the middle ..."