Gregg Shorthand - A Manual for Shorthand (Annotated)


Book Description

Published by John Robert Gregg in 1916, this Book is the Original 5th Edition of the Gregg Shorthand Manuals. This Manual Includes A Detailed Biography About John Robert Gregg and 50 Blank Gregg Shorthand/Steno Practice Pages at the End. This is Great Shorthand Book for Beginners and this is a Self-Taught Course You Can Do at Home! Gregg Shorthand Is A Form of Shorthand Writing Invented by Gregg Shorthand in 1888, and the Most Popular Form of Shorthand in the USA (Pittman Shorthand is Most Popular in the UK). An Abbreviated Form of Longhand Writing, Gregg Shorthand Increases Writing Speed, By Using a Phonetic System of Symbols Which Are Written as They Sound. Efficient Shorthand Writing, A Form of Stenography, Happens with Practice and Time. This Shorthand Practice Writing Notebook Will Help You Get Better with Your Shorthand Writing. Shorthand Can Benefit Journalists, Court Reporters, High School and College Students, and Especially, Stenographers. More About This Shorthand Practice Journal: Size: 6x9 Inches 229 Pages Perfect Bound Softcover Notebook Beautiful Glossy Finish on Cover







Popular Mechanics


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Swimming in the Steno Pool: A Retro Guide to Making It in the Office


Book Description

Feed your boss’s ego. Dress for success. And don’t let your heels trip you up on the corporate ladder. Millions of women have held the position of secretary, alternately lauded as a breakthrough opportunity and excoriated as dead-end busy work. From the female pioneers who infiltrated Capitol Hill offices during the Civil War to today’s tech-savvy administrative assistants, secretaries have withstood criticism for abandoning their rightful sphere (the home), weathered the dubious advice of secretarial guide-books, taken hits from feminists and antifeminists alike, and demanded the right to resist making coffee—all while making their bosses look good. In Swimming in the Steno Pool, author-secretary Lynn Peril profiles the various incarnations of the secretary, from pliable, sexy mate of the "office husband" to postfeminist executive-in-training, drawing inspiration from a wide range of "femorabilia" and secretarial guidebooks of yesteryear. Featuring an array of fabulous illustrations promoting office equipment and office girls alike, Peril delivers a feisty, witty celebration of the women who’ve been running the show for decades.