A monograph is a scholarly book or a treatise on a single subject or a group of related subjects, usually written by one person. A Book is a set or collection of written printed illustrated or blank sheets made of Paper, Parchment, or other material usually fastened together A treatise is a formal lengthy systematic Discourse on some subject It is a one-time publication that is complete in itself. To publish is to make content Publicly known. The term is most frequently applied to the distribution of text or images on paper or to the placing of content It may refer to a detailed, well-documented work on a limited subject or a person.
In library and information science, a monograph is a nonserial publication complete in one volume or a finite number of volumes. Library science is an Interdisciplinary Science incorporating the Humanities, Law and Applied science to study topics related to The volume of any solid plasma vacuum or theoretical object is how much three- Dimensional space it occupies often quantified numerically Thus it differs from a serial publication such as a magazine, journal or newspaper. Magazines, periodicals or serials are Publications generally published on a regular schedule containing a variety of articles, generally A journal (through French from late Latin diurnalis, daily has several related meanings a daily record of events or business a private A newspaper is a written Publication containing News, information and Advertising, usually printed on low-cost paper called Newsprint. [1]
In Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's stories, Sherlock Holmes repeatedly refers to the monographs he's written on such varied topics as the distinction between varieties of tobacco ash, the tracing of footsteps, and the influence of a trade upon the form of a hand.