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PSYCHOGRAPH Definition & Meaning - Dictionary.com
noun. Psychology., a graph indicating the relative strength of the personality traits of an individual . a psychologically oriented biography.
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www.dictionary.com
Psychograph - Wikipedia
The psychograph was a phrenology machine, invented and marketed by Henry C. Lavery in the early part of the 20th century.
en.wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
PSYCHOGRAPH Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
a biography written from a psychodynamic point of view. also : a character analysis. Love words? Need even more definitions? Subscribe to America's largest ...
www.merriam-webster.com
www.merriam-webster.com
psychograph
ˈpsychograph [f. as prec. + -graph.] 1. A photographic image attributed to a supernatural or spiritualistic cause.1882 ‘M. A. Oxon.’ Psychography (ed. 2) 11 The book is illustrated by thirty fac-similes of Psychographs thus obtained. Ibid. 12 He..obtained his..Psychographs by the simple process of p...
Oxford English Dictionary
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The JNB psychograph. - APA PsycNET
A psychograph for depicting the mental condition of a mental patient has been developed. It contains 21 general headings with 181 qualifying descriptive ...
psycnet.apa.org
psycnet.apa.org
PSYCHOGRAPH definition in American English - Collins Dictionary
noun Psychology a graphic chart outlining the relative strength of personality traits in an individual.
www.collinsdictionary.com
www.collinsdictionary.com
Psychographics - Wikipedia
Psychographics is defined as market research or statistics classifying population groups according to psychological variables.
en.wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
psychograph - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
A psychograph was a machine that was invented in the early 1900s to read people's thoughts. The first machine, introduced in 1931, contained almost 2,000 parts.
en.wiktionary.org
en.wiktionary.org
Psychograph: The Pseudoscientific Phrenology Machine
Phrenology measured bumps on people's heads to determine their mental faculties. Developed in the 1820s, it was the forerunner of ...
www.ripleys.com
www.ripleys.com
psychograph, n. meanings, etymology and more | Oxford English ...
The earliest known use of the noun psychograph is in the 1820s. OED's earliest evidence for psychograph is from 1821, in the writing of James Jennings.
www.oed.com
www.oed.com
psychographer
psyˈchographer [f. psychograph + -er1; see -grapher.] 1. An instrument or medium by which psychographs (sense 1) or spirit-writings are written; (see also quot. 1876).1854 Dickens Lett., to Rev. J. White 7 Mar., A thing called a Psychographer, which writes at the dictation of spirits. 1876 A. Blackw...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Cornelia Cederberg
It began as an ordinary spiritualist group that received messages through a psychograph (an instrument for recording spirit writings) or a trance medium
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Anna Cassel
The artists in their seances were said to have communicated with spirits through a psychograph, an instrument for recording spirit writings, or a trance
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
sym-
sym-, prefix (sɪm) repr. Gr. συµ-, assimilated form of συν- syn-1, before labials (β, µ, π, ϕ, ψ), hence in words of Greek derivation in Latin and modern languages before b, m, p. symmorphic (sɪˈmɔːfɪk), a. nonce-wd. [f. Gr. σύµµορϕος (µορϕή form) + -ic], having the same or a like form; conformed; s...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Edward Wagenknecht
His doctoral dissertation was a Bradford-like psychograph, Charles Dickens: A Victorian Portrait. Wagenknecht himself pointed out his debt to Bradford and Sainte-Beuve:
My specialty as a writer was the psychograph or character portrait, which I learned
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org