Details, Explanation and Meaning About Shorthand

Shorthand Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

Shorthand is a writing method that can be done at speed because an abbreviated or symbolic form of language is used. It is commonly used by court stenographers. The word stenography comes from the Greek for "close writing".

Many forms of shorthand exist. The method was more popular in the past, when anything needing transcribing had to be written in real-time. This was a valuable skill to secretaries and journalists. Shorthand is basically a way of writing that represents common words, phrases and sentences in symbols or abbreviations that the writer can write faster, to allow people to write as fast as people speak.

Table of contents
1 Classification
2 Common English shorthand systems
3 Some shorthand systems
4 See also
5 Reference
6 External links

Classification

Some systems have signs that are not based on the Latin alphabet, whereas other systems are explicitly intended to resemble the Latin alphabet. Some consider that strictly speaking, only the former are shorthand. There are between one and two dozen examples of the latter in the United States, such as Stenoscript, Stenospeed, and Forkner, which use both symbols and alphabetic characters, to one extent or another.

It is useful to classify the shorthand systems according to the way how vowels are represented:

  • 'Normal' vowel signs (no distinction between vowel signs and consonant signs), e.g. Gregg.
  • Other ways of expressing the vowels:
    • expression of the first vowel by the height of the word in relation to the line, e.g. Pitman;
    • optional expression of the vowels by diacritics added to the word, e.g. Pitman;
    • expression by the width of the joining stroke that leads to the following consonant sing, the height of the following consonant sign in relation to the preceding one, and the line pressure of the following consonant sign, e.g. in most German shorthand systems;
    • no expression of the vowels at all except for a dot before the word for any initial vowel and a dot after the word for any ending vowel, e.g. Taylor.

Common English shorthand systems

One of the most widely known forms of shorthand is the Pitman method, developed by Isaac Pitman in 1837. Issac's brother Benn Pitman, who lived in Cincinnati, Ohio, was responsible for introducing the method to America. The method has been adapted for 15 languages. The system is phonetic as it is the word sounds that are written rather than the letters. For this reason, the system is sometimes known as phonography, meaning 'sound writing' in Greek. One of the reasons this method allows fast transcription is that vowel sounds are optional when only consonants are needed to determine a word. Pitman's system replaced the system developed by Samuel Taylor in 1786, the first English shorthand system that succeeded to be used all over the English speaking world.

Although Pitman's method was extremely popular at first (and is still commonly used, especially in the UK) its popularity has been superseded (especially in the States) by a method developed by John Robert Gregg in 1888. Gregg's system, like Pitman's, is phonetic, but has the advantage of being "ligghght-line." While Pitman's system uses thick and thin strokes to distinguish related sounds, Gregg's uses only thin strokes and makes some of the same distinctions by the length of the stroke.

Some shorthand systems

Dutton Speedwords is a method of shorthand that had the dual function of also being an international auxilary language.

See also

abbreviation, Captioned Telephone, closed captioning, court reporter, Gregg Shorthand, Pitman Shorthand, stenomask, stenotype, transcript, Shavian alphabet, Quickscript, Tironian notes, Shorthand Language

Reference

Pitmans College (1975). Shorthand. Hodder and Stoughton. (ISBN 0340056878).

External links


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