| 释义 | 
		Definition of pantograph in English: pantographnoun ˈpantəɡrɑːfˈpæn(t)əˌɡræf 1An instrument for copying a plan or drawing on a different scale by a system of hinged and jointed rods. 缩放仪,比例绘图仪 Example sentencesExamples -  The pantograph was a movable parallelogram that could be mounted on a drawing board or stationed atop a table, as in the frontispiece to Scheiner's Pantographice.
 -  Shortly before dusk, he arrived at the Maryland State House clutching two homemade drawing instruments, a simplified camera obscura and a modified pantograph.
 -  During this same period, the invention of the pantograph made it possible to create large and sometimes elaborate display letters.
 -  Wallace also invented the pantograph, an instrument for duplicating a geometric shape at a reduced or enlarged scale.
 
 2A jointed framework conveying a current to a train, tram, or other electric vehicle from overhead wires. (电动车辆上的)导电弓(架) Example sentencesExamples -  It will have a roof-mounted pantograph for use between Gare Centrale and wherever the terminus in Samoa will be.
 -  I was fairly late to work as the train fell apart this morning - the pantographs on the top fell down.
 -  The electric part is that it uses a pantograph or roof mounted current collector to pick up electricity from the overhead catenary or wires.
 -  Currently in the open air, and unprotected from the tropical atmosphere, are four abandoned diesel electric locomotives, an oil tanker wagon, a steam crane and a General Electric pantograph power unit from 1924.
 -  The pantograph feeds the electricity from the overhead supply to the train.
 
 
 Derivativesadjective pantəˈɡrafɪk  Type produced by pantographic reproduction (scaling a master drawing to many different sizes), and the later technologies of photocomposition and digital type, allowed working from a single master design regardless of the size of the final application. Example sentencesExamples -  These artists - St-Gaudens, Weinman, Fraser, MacNeil, de Francisci - created oversize models which were pantographically reduced.
 
 
 
 OriginEarly 18th century: from panto- 'all, universal' + Greek -graphos 'writing'.    Definition of pantograph in US English: pantographnounˈpæn(t)əˌɡræfˈpan(t)əˌɡraf 1An instrument for copying a drawing or plan on a different scale by a system of hinged and jointed rods. 缩放仪,比例绘图仪 Example sentencesExamples -  The pantograph was a movable parallelogram that could be mounted on a drawing board or stationed atop a table, as in the frontispiece to Scheiner's Pantographice.
 -  Wallace also invented the pantograph, an instrument for duplicating a geometric shape at a reduced or enlarged scale.
 -  During this same period, the invention of the pantograph made it possible to create large and sometimes elaborate display letters.
 -  Shortly before dusk, he arrived at the Maryland State House clutching two homemade drawing instruments, a simplified camera obscura and a modified pantograph.
 
 2A jointed framework conveying a current to a train, streetcar, or other electric vehicle from overhead wires. (电动车辆上的)导电弓(架) Example sentencesExamples -  The pantograph feeds the electricity from the overhead supply to the train.
 -  Currently in the open air, and unprotected from the tropical atmosphere, are four abandoned diesel electric locomotives, an oil tanker wagon, a steam crane and a General Electric pantograph power unit from 1924.
 -  I was fairly late to work as the train fell apart this morning - the pantographs on the top fell down.
 -  It will have a roof-mounted pantograph for use between Gare Centrale and wherever the terminus in Samoa will be.
 -  The electric part is that it uses a pantograph or roof mounted current collector to pick up electricity from the overhead catenary or wires.
 
 
 OriginEarly 18th century: from panto- ‘all, universal’ + Greek -graphos ‘writing’.     |