The Art of Short-hand Writing ...U. Hunt & son, 1845 - 60 páginas |
Dentro del libro
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Página viii
... memory could scarcely retain them , and if at all recalled by memory , it was not with sufficient facility to answer the end for which they were intended . We have thus far traced the subject as an art merely , without beholding one ...
... memory could scarcely retain them , and if at all recalled by memory , it was not with sufficient facility to answer the end for which they were intended . We have thus far traced the subject as an art merely , without beholding one ...
Página xii
... memory be left to languish in sickly inactivity , and thus gradually lose its energies and become enervated , for the want of proper exercise , the loss is greater than the gain . The memory , then , while it should not be overbur ...
... memory be left to languish in sickly inactivity , and thus gradually lose its energies and become enervated , for the want of proper exercise , the loss is greater than the gain . The memory , then , while it should not be overbur ...
Página xiv
... memory be left to languish in sickly inactivity, and thus gradually lose its energies and become enervated, for the want of propér exercise, the loss is greater than the gain. The memory, then, while it should not be overburdened with ...
... memory be left to languish in sickly inactivity, and thus gradually lose its energies and become enervated, for the want of propér exercise, the loss is greater than the gain. The memory, then, while it should not be overburdened with ...
Página viii
... memory could scarcely retain them , and if at all recalled by memory , it was not with sufficient facility to answer the end for which they were intended . We have thus far traced the subject as an art merely , without beholding one ...
... memory could scarcely retain them , and if at all recalled by memory , it was not with sufficient facility to answer the end for which they were intended . We have thus far traced the subject as an art merely , without beholding one ...
Página xii
... memory be left to languish in sickly inactivity , and thus gradually lose its energies and become enervated , for the want of proper exercise , the loss is greater than the gain . The memory , then , while it should not be overbur ...
... memory be left to languish in sickly inactivity , and thus gradually lose its energies and become enervated , for the want of proper exercise , the loss is greater than the gain . The memory , then , while it should not be overbur ...
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Términos y frases comunes
acquired adapted alchy arbitrary characters arbitrary signs arithmetic Behold Byrom caret commit words common alphabet common place book common writing diphthongal earth editions end of words Ennius facit FAST AS DELIVERED firmament Fr.-The frequent grammar rules Habeas corpus heaven hieroglyphics human voice instruction introduction of arbitrary ious Jews JOHN HANCOCK king Agrippa learner legibility Lex scripta lifting the pen light limb line of writing Lord M. T. C. GOULD margin ment musical signs necessary object omitted person philosopher's stone Plate Plutarch powers practice prefixes present preservation propriety racters recorded the language rendered represented by individual rience short writing SHORT-HAND WRITING simple Sine sounds steno stenographic system of short system of short-hand system of stenography terminations theory thing thou tion United unto thee Vespasian visible signs voice Voir dire vowel words to paper written Xenophon