I do not agree with your basic premise, namely, that characters in Gregg shorthand correspond to consonants and vowels, let alone their sounds. They do not. Basically, the symbols [characters] in Gregg shorthand represent sounds, which may or may not correspond to a letter in the alphabet. Often, these symbols correspond to combinations (TH) of two or more letters. This general principle evolves into ever more complex permutations as one's knowledge of Gregg shorthand progresses. Please also note that your presentation refers to Gregg shorthand in English. While the general idea is generally similar to Gregg shorthand in English, different and/or particular principles often apply depending on Gregg shorthand in other languages.
You are absolutely correct. You can't really correspond the letters of the alphabet to the letters of the Gregg Shorthand alphabet. Gregg alphabet consonant sounds are group together by their affinity of sound and distinguished by their lenght or height as being either voiced or voiceless, with the larger being voiced. Since English is not a phonetic language it would be particularly troublesome to make a letter by letter comparison.
Very comprehensive presentation. Thanks
Music on this content is like chocolate syrup on a hot ramen.
Awesome video!!! Thanks for the help! :)
thank you so much, because you help me much.
Within the first few weeks of January 2017, I will remove all the existing Gregg shorthand tutorials and replace them with new videos.
Its 2018 now bruh
@@lo9804 lol its now 2019 hahaha
@@MrMusic-nx2mt
:(
well
@@MrMusic-nx2mt 2020 and still waiting :'(
Cool, I LOVE it!!!!
Wow...great tutorial😇😘
Wonderful overview of all the outlines! How about a video for the brief forms; and then later, maybe one showing phrasing?
Teri Washbear, I will do all that, as soon as possible.
Hey when is part 4# coming up of your shorthand guide?
tymo98, as soon as possible.
What about w?
"W" like water...
"oo" , "aw", "o" ...
Looks like a tiny half circle, either up, or over...
Hope it helped 😊
Started to watch this but stopped bc the music was so annoying... (I know I could of turned the volume down but still, thought you should know..) : (
Before even reading your comment, I did the exact same thing
Well, I liked the music - it's optimistic.
When your boomer-ass dad discovers Powerpoint for the first time. Informative though!
I like the BGM...
Thank you for your tutorials. Other than the examples you provided, are other examples of blended vowels?
Sir can I plz provide full course of Greg shorthand plzzzz
Awesome pics
Why don't you upload related to shorthand
Upload more like these videos and you will become more popular in the world
Belive me
you missed w,x,y,z
and many other forms
Well done!
How will we differentiate 'SH' and 'T'...
Imagine you are in the center of a clock, shay is written toward 7, while tay is written toward 2. There is a slight difference in their slants.
Nice
Please spell "knee" vs "any." Each has two sounds, and they are identical.
Knee is two, any is three. "ne", "ane" or "ene" depending on pronunciation
So are K and C the same because they sound the same?
Balto they are. K is just to interpret sound. If you ask someone for shorthand spelling of word "cat," you would be given K-A-T.
what is the right key between "k" and "c" ?
I do not agree with your basic premise, namely, that characters in Gregg shorthand correspond to consonants and vowels, let alone their sounds. They do not. Basically, the symbols [characters] in Gregg shorthand represent sounds, which may or may not correspond to a letter in the alphabet. Often, these symbols correspond to combinations (TH) of two or more letters. This general principle evolves into ever more complex permutations as one's knowledge of Gregg shorthand progresses. Please also note that your presentation refers to Gregg shorthand in English. While the general idea is generally similar to Gregg shorthand in English, different and/or particular principles often apply depending on Gregg shorthand in other languages.
You are absolutely correct. You can't really correspond the letters of the alphabet to the letters of the Gregg Shorthand alphabet. Gregg alphabet consonant sounds are group together by their affinity of sound and distinguished by their lenght or height as being either voiced or voiceless, with the larger being voiced. Since English is not a phonetic language it would be particularly troublesome to make a letter by letter comparison.
Bhai ye galat hai aapne copy kara hai coaching for jobs ka
Sir aapka mobile no. Chaiye
Please more lessons♥️ i loved shortand; but i dont know shorthand nor english well 🤹♀️
Pls remove bc music
Pfft wot?
@@fatimaisra9143 what?
@@Sanjay-ui2xq exactly what i said
You have to be pretty technical: press the Mute button or turn down the sound. Either works 100%.
The graphics and animation is so cringe. 👎