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  2. Gregg shorthand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregg_shorthand

    Gregg shorthand is a system of shorthand developed by John Robert Gregg in 1888. Distinguished by its phonemic basis, the system prioritizes the sounds of speech over traditional English spelling, enabling rapid writing by employing elliptical figures and lines that bisect them.

  3. Alphabetic principle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alphabetic_principle

    Alphabetic writing systems that use an (in principle) almost perfectly phonemic orthography have a single letter (or digraph or, occasionally, trigraph) for each individual phoneme and a one-to-one correspondence between sounds and the letters that represent them, although predictable allophonic alternation is normally not shown.

  4. The Elements of Style - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Elements_of_Style

    The Elements of Style (also called Strunk & White) is a style guide for formal grammar used in American English writing. The first publishing was written by William Strunk Jr. in 1918, and published by Harcourt in 1920, comprising eight "elementary rules of usage," ten "elementary principles of composition," "a few matters of form," a list of 49 "words and expressions commonly misused," and a ...

  5. Theories of rhetoric and composition pedagogy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theories_of_Rhetoric_and...

    [19] Social constructionist James Porter notes the "intertextuality" of all writing as interdependent, based on the principle that all speech and writing evolves from presumed meaning and accepted evidence as defined by each "discourse community," which Porter defines as "a group of individuals bound by a common interest who communicate through ...

  6. Writing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Writing

    The Phoenician writing system was adapted from the Proto-Canaanite script sometime before the 14th century BC, which in turn borrowed principles of representing phonetic information from Egyptian hieroglyphs. This writing system was an odd sort of syllabary in which only consonants are represented.

  7. The three Rs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_three_Rs

    The three Rs [1] are three basic skills taught in schools: reading, writing and arithmetic", Reading, wRiting, and ARithmetic [2] or Reckoning. The phrase appears to have been coined at the beginning of the 19th century.