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logography
[loh-gog-ruh-fee]
noun
printing with logotypes.
a method of longhand reporting, each of several reporters in succession taking down a few words.
logography
/ ɒˈɡɒɡəɪ /
noun
(formerly) a method of longhand reporting
Other Word Forms
- logographer noun
- ˈDz noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of logography1
Example Sentences
But in 1753 he was eagerly engaged in having several of his improvements incorporated in a new press, and more than twenty years after was actively interested in John Walter’s scheme of “logography.”
All the beauty, dignity, and glory of English logography seem to be his: he marshals an array of adjectives and phrases which seem all of the blood royal of our munificent mother tongue.
Something akin to stereotyping is another method of printing, called logography, invented by John Walter of the London Times, in 1783, and for which he took out a patent.
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