Business shorthand; by Kimball D

Business shorthand; by Kimball D

Author:Kimball, D[uran] [from old catalog]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: Shorthand
Publisher: Chicago, D. Kimball
Published: 1902-03-25T05:00:00+00:00


\o l^-

: Iojy A- iuAh VW^l r-c/^ I alue

" )}'c Uiil cL^i/cu lull

/ t -^^/X'

3 — \j 'i^-c

^

y X"

/ —^-?

^^

/f'

-^/ v-^C^,

V

^^)

-V

/ '

-w-/-'^^^

LESSON 13.

SUPPLEMENTARY EXERCISE 6.

Write the following- words in accordance with the principles illustrated and explained in Lesson 7 and preceding Lessons:

\. Booty booth booming boon (Boone) baboon boor boorish pool poorly goose coop uncouth coon coolly (cooly) courier toot twos tomb shoes sooty soothe moody minutiae moose Moore (moor) news (noose) newly newel (Newell) lose (loose) loom illume lunacy ruby rouge uniformly uniformity unanimity.

2. Bouquet book-keeping bushy bully bullet bulletin pudding pulley pussy cuckoo cookey nook outlook,

3. Gaudy gauzy calk born daub debauch dawn adorn torch shawl salt malt laws nauseous warp warmth warmly warrior wharf horn jaws chalky.

4. Auburn balky pawn Paul (pall pawl) appall fawn fauna yawn accordingly forgive forgiven forgiving formality formerly deformity reformer.

5. Cog cogitate topic autopsy toddy tossing Tom dogma doff doll folly column solve solemn offshoot omniscience homage noxious novice anomaly anonymous jog jockey chop.

6. Bob bog pop poppy epoch gong cob collapse don tonic tongs fop foggy fox sob sock song thong mop mock lop log lock logic objected objective objecting popularity unpopular.

EXPLANATION OF PRINCIPLES.

7. S unites with a following pfci/m?iZand w, forming double consonant sounds, called the s-series of compounds. The s in such cases is uniformly represented by a small circle made on the right or upper side of the straight letters, struck in the direction contrary to the movement of the hands of a clock, and in the inside of curved letters, formed with the same movement which makes the curve. It should be made small, exact and neatly. The loop shown in 1-c-i-r and 2 -a, expresses an st and is used here as a means of distinction. Z at the beginning of a word is always written with the full, al-fabetic letter, never with the circle.

8. 2-c to 3-a, 3-c to 4-c and 4-e to 7-e show how sp, sk [scr and st are written in the beginning of words.



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