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cinematograph
[ sin-uh-mat-uh-graf, -grahf ]
noun
- an early movie camera or projector, often a single mechanical device to record and project film.
- Older Use. a movie theater.
verb (used with or without object)
- Older Use. to record as a movie.
cinematograph
/ -ˌɡræf; ˌsɪnɪˈmætəˌɡrɑːf /
noun
- a combined camera, printer, and projector
verb
- to take pictures (of) with a film camera
Other Words From
- cin·e·mat·o·graph·ic [sin-, uh, -mat-, uh, -, graf, -ik], adjective
- cine·mato·graphi·cal·ly adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of cinematograph1
Word History and Origins
Origin of cinematograph1
Example Sentences
The party would feature presentations on the latest scientific developments, including a newfangled invention called the cinematograph.
Not long after his death, a shoemaker’s son named Georges Méliès purchased the Theatre Robert-Houdin and upon seeing a demonstration of the newly invented cinematograph by the Lumière brothers, acquired his own projector.
By the following year in a bleak review of the 1947 box office, editors at Life wrote, "Since the invention of the cinematograph, hardly a movie season has seen the bad pictures so heavily outweigh the good."
In 1909, the Cinematograph Act was introduced to try to ensure that all screenings took place in buildings which were safe and suitable for public showings.
Shows like Sacred Games, on Netflix, didn’t come under the ambit of Cinematograph Act, and thus the censor board couldn’t dictate terms.
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