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Sua resolutio (533 × 1 013 elementa imaginalia, magnitudo fasciculi: 74 chiliocteti, typus MIME: image/png)

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Summarium

From the 1897 book Eclectic Shorthand by Cross. Scanned by Marlow4 and placed in public domain.

It is the Lord's Prayer in English.

It shows shorthand methods of :

  • John Robert Gregg (1866 – 1948)
  • Isaac Pitman (1813 — 1897)
  • Graham
  • James Eugene Munson (1835 — 1906)
  • Lindsley
  • Helen M. Pernin (author of Universal phonography in ten lessons)
  • Cross (eclectic)

History

This file is imported from Wikipedia EN. Old history :

  • 15:32, 6 August 2005 . . Kilobytezero (114817 bytes) : I resized the Gregg text to fit the rule of the other systems, which is 34.667 px per line. It seems that no matter how much I conform the Gregg to the geometric systems, Gregg always winds up looking so out of place.
  • 06:33, 6 August 2005 . . Kilobytezero (115609 bytes) : I made and added the Gregg version of this prayer. The original contents are from the 1894 book Eclectic Shorthand by Cross, scanned by Marlow4, and placed in public domain.
  • 19:15, 12 June 2005 . . Marlow4 (570634 bytes) : From the 1894 book "Eclectic Shorthand" by Cross. Scanned by me and placed in public domain.

Potestas usoris

Public domain

This work is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 70 years or fewer.


You must also include a United States public domain tag to indicate why this work is in the public domain in the United States.
This file has been identified as being free of known restrictions under copyright law, including all related and neighboring rights.

Captions

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An illustration of 'the Lord's Prayer' hand-written in Gregg Shorthand and a variety of 19th-century shorthand systems

media type Anglica

image/png

Historia fasciculi

Presso die vel tempore fasciculum videbis, sicut tunc temporis apparuit.

Dies/TempusMinutioDimensionesUsorSententia
recentissima20:04, 19 Martii 2010Minutum speculum redactionis 20:04, 19 Martii 2010 factae533 × 1 013 (74 chiliocteti)AtomCrusherSqueeze!
10:59, 3 Septembris 2005Minutum speculum redactionis 10:59, 3 Septembris 2005 factae533 × 1 013 (112 chiliocteti)Haypo~commonswiki"I resized the Gregg text to fit the rule of the other systems, which is 34.667 px per line. It seems that no matter how much I conform the Gregg to the geometric systems, Gregg always winds up looking so out of place.)" (by Kilobytezero on Wikipedia EN).
10:58, 3 Septembris 2005Minutum speculum redactionis 10:58, 3 Septembris 2005 factae533 × 1 075 (113 chiliocteti)Haypo~commonswikiRight comments for first upload was "From the 1894 book "Eclectic Shorthand" by Cross. Scanned by me and placed in public domain {{PD}}" (by Marlow4 on Wikipedia EN). Comments of the file are : "I made and added the Gregg version of this prayer. The orig
10:55, 3 Septembris 2005Minutum speculum redactionis 10:55, 3 Septembris 2005 factae533 × 816 (557 chiliocteti)Haypo~commonswiki== Summary == From the 1897 book ''Eclectic Shorthand'' by Cross. Scanned by [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Marlow4 Marlow4] and placed in public domain. It shows shorthand methods of : * John Robert Gregg (1866 – 1948) * Isaac Pitman (1813 — 18

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