Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary · 1913

Graphic

Graphic (graf"ik) , adjective

[Latin graphicus, Greek grafiko`s, from gra`fein to write; compare French graphique. See Graft.]

1.
Of or pertaining to the arts of painting and drawing; of or pertaining to graphics; as, graphic art work.
2.
Of or pertaining to the art of writing.
3.
Written or engraved; formed of letters or lines.
The finger of God hath left an inscription upon all his works, not graphical, or composed of letters. — Sir T. Browne
4.
Having the faculty of clear, detailed, and impressive description; as, a graphic writer.
5.
Well delineated; clearly and vividly described; characterized by, clear, detailed, and impressive description; vivid; evoking lifelike images within the mind; as graphic details of the President's sexual misbehavior; a graphic description of the accident; graphic images of violence.
6.
describing nudity or sexual activity in explicit detail; as, a novel with graphic sex scenes.
7.
relating to or presented by a graph{2}; as, a graphic presentation of the data.
Collocations (6)
Graphic algebra , , a branch of algebra in which, the properties of equations are treated by the use of curves and straight lines.
Graphic arts , a name given to those fine arts which pertain to the representation on a fiat surface of natural objects; as distinguished from music, etc., and also from sculpture.
Graphic formula (Chemistry) , See under Formula.
Graphic granite , See under Granite.
Graphic method , the method of scientific analysis or investigation, in which the relations or laws involved in tabular numbers are represented to the eye by means of curves or other figures; as the daily changes of weather by means of curves, the abscissas of which represent the hours of the day, and the ordinates the corresponding degrees of temperature.
Graphic tellurium , See Sylvanite.

Also: Graphical