Epigraph in a sentence as a noun

"Call me Ishmael..." has to be in the epigraph of this book!

Also, an epigraph is not the same as a quotation: [...] 2.

This New Yorker piece is a comical riposte to the NY Times article cited in the epigraph.

According to the epigraph, God said something about D and H, but those were carefully avoided in the text.

Apologies - I didn't even realize that the epigraph expressed some of the equations in terms of flux density!

The tangent to a graph at the point x is the boundary between two line pencils, one of lines entering the epigraph at x, the other of lines leaving.

Once you taken away the leading epigraph from David Deutsch and the rather long title, there are barely 400 words of actual content from Cummings.> about the possible threat of coronavirusesIn its original form, the post does not mention coronaviruses.

As it tries to plug its own holes and find the leakers, he reasons, its component elements will de-synchronize from and turn against each other, de-link from the central processing network, and come undone.... he quotes Theodore Roosevelt’s words from his 1912 Progressive party presidential platform as the epigraph to the first essay; Roosevelt realized a hundred years ago that "Behind the ostensible government sits enthroned an invisible government owing no allegiance and acknowledging no responsibility to the people," and it was true, then too, that "To destroy this invisible government, to befoul this unholy alliance between corrupt business and corrupt politics is the first task of statesmanship.

Epigraph definitions

noun

a quotation at the beginning of some piece of writing

noun

an engraved inscription