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  2. Shorthand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shorthand

    The Lord's Prayer in Gregg and a variety of 19th-century systems Dutch stenography using the "System Groote". Shorthand is an abbreviated symbolic writing method that increases speed and brevity of writing as compared to longhand, a more common method of writing a language.

  3. Spencerian script - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spencerian_Script

    Spencerian script is a handwriting script style based on Copperplate script that was used in the United States from approximately 1850 to 1925, [1] [2] and was considered the American de facto standard writing style for business correspondence prior to the widespread adoption of the typewriter.

  4. Pitman shorthand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pitman_shorthand

    Pitman shorthand is a system of shorthand for the English language developed by Englishman Sir Isaac Pitman (1813–1897), who first presented it in 1837. [1] Like most systems of shorthand, it is a phonetic system; the symbols do not represent letters, but rather sounds, and words are, for the most part, written as they are spoken.

  5. List of shorthand systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_shorthand_systems

    Short-Writing [60] 1690: Theophilus Metcalfe: English: Simson Shorthand [61] 1881: James Simson: English: Speedwriting [62] 1924: Emma Dearborn: English: State Unified Stenography System (GESS) [63] 1937: Nikolai Nikolaevich Sokolov: Russian: Used in the Soviet Union; also adapted for English, French, and some of the languages of the Soviet ...

  6. Penmanship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penmanship

    By the nineteenth century, attention was increasingly given to developing quality penmanship in Eastern schools. Countries that had a writing system based on logographs and syllabaries placed particular emphasis on form and quality when learning. [27] These countries, such as China and Japan, have pictophonetic characters that are difficult to ...

  7. Palmer Method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palmer_Method

    D'Nealian, a style of writing and teaching cursive and manuscript adapted from the Palmer Method; Zaner-Bloser script, another streamlined form of Spencerian script; Library hand another 19th-century script developed by Melvil Dewey and Thomas Edison; Round hand, a style of handwriting and calligraphy originating in England in the 1660s

  8. Ordinal indicator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ordinal_indicator

    In 19th-century handwriting, these terminals were often elevated, that is to say written as superscripts (e.g. 2 nd, 34 th). With the gradual introduction of the typewriter in the late 19th century, it became common to write them on the baseline in typewritten texts, [ 17 ] and this usage even became recommended in certain 20th-century style ...

  9. Tironian notes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tironian_notes

    R rotunda substituting for Tironian et in the abbreviation etc. in a German print from 1845 In blackletter texts (especially in German printing), it was still used in the abbreviation ⁊c. meaning etc. (for et cetera ) throughout the 19th century.