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Learning shorthand

Bert Canning (Secretarial Training Adviser, Pitman Training Division)

Education + Training

ISSN: 0040-0912

Article publication date: 1 June 1976

82

Abstract

We honour the great unknowns in the early history of mankind who first thought of the wheel or of the domestic use of fire. A still more climacteric concept was that of the man who saw the possibility of capturing the ephemeral spoken word in a permanent visual form — turned speech into writing, in short. We have come a long way from those early days of the pictograph and the hieroglyphic, the cuneiform script and the clay tablet. The story is rivettingly fascinating, and it is superbly told in the two volumes of David Diringer's The Alphabet (Hutchinson), sub‐titled A Key to the History of Mankind; and rightly so, I think.

Citation

Canning, B. (1976), "Learning shorthand", Education + Training, Vol. 18 No. 6, pp. 179-180. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb001925

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1976, MCB UP Limited

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