1. 
[syn: artwork, art, graphics, nontextual matter]
2.  the drawings and photographs in the layout of a book; 
The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48:
Graphics \Graph"ics\, n.
   The art or the science of drawing; esp. of drawing according
   to mathematical rules, as in perspective, projection, and the
   like.
   [1913 Webster]
WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006):
graphics
    n 1: photographs or other visual representations in a printed
         publication; "the publisher was responsible for all the
         artwork in the book" [syn: artwork, art, graphics,
         nontextual matter]
    2: the drawings and photographs in the layout of a book
The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (30 December 2018):
graphics
    Any kind of visible output including text,
   images, movies, line art and digital photographs;
   stored in bitmap or vector graphic form.
   Most modern computers can display non-text data and most use
   a graphical user interface (GUI) for virtually all
   interaction with the user.  Special hardware, typically some
   kind of graphics adaptor, is required to allow the computer
   to display graphics (as opposed to, say, printing text on a
   teletype) but since GUIs became ubiquitous this has become
   the default form of visual output.  The most demanding
   applications for computer graphics are those where the
   computer actually generates moving images in real time,
   especially in video games.
   There are many kinds of software devoted to manipulating
   graphical data, including image editing (e.g. Photoshop),
   drawing (e.g. Illustrator), user interface toolkits
   (e.g. X Window System), CAD, CGI.
   (2009-06-24)