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Pitmans Quick Reference Table

This document provides a quick reference table defining shorthand symbols and their meanings. It includes symbols such as periods, question marks, brackets, dashes, hyphens, paragraph marks and more. For each symbol, it explains how to write it and when it would be used.

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Mustufa Alam
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
31 views6 pages

Pitmans Quick Reference Table

This document provides a quick reference table defining shorthand symbols and their meanings. It includes symbols such as periods, question marks, brackets, dashes, hyphens, paragraph marks and more. For each symbol, it explains how to write it and when it would be used.

Uploaded by

Mustufa Alam
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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QUICK REFERENCE TABLE

Name Longhand Shorthand

Full stop . Never ever omit the full


Period stop.
The joined cross is much
quicker than a normal cross
and does not clash with
anything, so long as you
keep it small.
When writing longhand
numerals, use the full stop
as normal within them.

Question ? Some questions are only


mark indicated by the tone of
Interrogation voice, so always insert the
mark question mark.

Exclamation ! The tone of voice lets you


mark know whether this is
needed. Imagine someone
saying:
No – No? – No!

Initial capital None Write it upwards,


underneath the line. Place it
underneath the rightmost
part of the outline, so that
your pen does not travel
any farther backwards than
it has to.
All initial None Instead of going back over
capitals the last 2 or 3 words to
indicate initial capitals for
each of them, use this to
save time. This is a personal
suggestion and is NOT part
of normal New Era theory.

Brackets [] Make the strike-through


Parentheses ( ) quite small, so it does not
look like an intersection on
an outline.
Brackets are square and
parentheses are curved, but
the terms are often used
interchangeably.

En dash – Dashes are used to separate


Em dash sentences or parts of
— sentences. The longer you
draw the dash, the less
likely it is that it will look
like an outline.
In longhand, an En dash
(Alt+0150) has a space
either side. The longer Em
dash (Alt+0151) looks
better without the spaces.

Hyphen - Write the marks upwards.


Hyphens are used to join
two words, or two numerals
showing a range. The
shorthand mark is the same
as the initial capital mark,
but used above the line
instead of under it. There is
no need to use it slavishly,
only use it where it serves
your purpose.
Words that have part of the
outline disjoined do not
need a hyphen to join them,
they are merely written
close together.
A hyphen in longhand
transcription does not have
a space either side.

Paragraph // may be Write the marks


mark used when downwards. Paragraph
New correcting marks help with reading
paragraph drafts by back or locating
New line hand information, as they break
the page into meaningful
sections.
You can drop down to the
next line instead of writing
the paragraph mark, but
this will lose you a line of
the page each time, causing
an increase in the frequency
of page turns. The white
space on the page may help
you to keep your place
when transcribing or
searching your notes.
When pushed for time, do
not indulge in paragraph
marks, getting all the words
is far more important.
The double slash and the
pilcrow ¶ symbol have a
long history as paragraph
markers, continuing to the
present day on your screen
to show that the Enter key
has been pressed. To type a
pilcrow that will print, type
Alt+0182.

Emphasis or None Wavy or zigzag line draws


caution your attention to the word –
for emphasis, an unusual,
foreign or nonsense word, a
word used out of context,
longhand numerals to show
they are not outlines, doubt
over the outline, or
something you need to
check or look up.

Humour None Vertical squiggle indicates


that the preceding word(s)
should be taken
humorously. In transcription
you would need to set it
within quotation marks, use
italics, or whatever is
appropriate to convey the
meaning and avoid
ambiguity.
Some people make "quote
mark" gestures with their
fingers as they are saying
such things, but you will
have to rely on tone of voice
to identify the way that the
words should be taken.

Error Scribble! Draw a large circle around


the error and then write the
correct outline. When you
transcribe, you will be
ignoring anything in the
circle. Do this in preference
to scribbling over an outline
or trying to correct it. In
one-to-one dictation, you
would do this when the
speaker changes their mind
over their choice of words.
If you are using a
pencil, never use a rubber.
If your pencil has a rubber
on the end, cut it off and
sharpen the second end,
which will be much more
useful.
If you are marking up
outlines afterwards for
future looking up in the
dictionary, then use a red
pencil or draw a square
around it – unless the
shorthand must be kept for
archive purposes, then you
should note the items on a
separate pad.
Correction of If you write an outline in the
position wrong position, correct it by
inserting some dots or
dashes where the ruled line
ought to be. This is
especially useful for short
forms and contractions
where there is no vowel that
can be inserted. It is often
quicker than writing in the
first vowel for any outline,
as it takes less thought and
hesitation. Useful also for
notes made on unlined
paper.

Accented Dictionaries Write the cross against (or


syllable use an in place of*) the accented
apostroph, vowel. This helps distinguish
dot or desert pairs of words.
similar desert
(*It is not normal theory to
mark after
replace the vowel
the syllable

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