Found 1 items, similar to Cinematograph.
English → English (gcide)
Definition: Cinematograph
Cinematograph
\Cin`e*mat"o*graph\, n. [Gr. ?, ?, motion +
-graph.]
1. an older name for a
movie projector, a machine,
combining magic lantern and kinetoscope features, for
projecting on a screen a series of pictures, moved rapidly
(25 to 50 frames per second) and intermittently before an
objective lens, and producing by persistence of vision the
illusion of continuous motion; a moving-picture projector;
also, any of several other machines or devices producing
moving pictorial effects. Other older names for the
movie projector
are
animatograph,
biograph,
bioscope,
electrograph,
electroscope,
kinematograph,
kinetoscope,
veriscope,
vitagraph,
vitascope,
zo["o]gyroscope,
zo["o]praxiscope, etc.
The cinematograph, invented by Edison in 1894, is
the result of the introduction of the flexible film
into photography in place of glass. --Encyc. Brit.
[Webster 1913 Suppl.]
2. A camera for taking chronophotographs for exhibition by
the instrument described above.
[Webster 1913 Suppl.]