APA (7th ed.) Citation

Facy, W. (1672). The complement of stenography, or, The power of the pen displayed in a new art of charactery: Being a more speedier, swifter and compendious method of short-writing, then heretofore hath been by any other composed : so far from over-burdening memory, that it teaches the true art of memory in which all those inconveniences which are found in other methods to the discouragement of learners and rendring [sic] the reading of what according to them hath been written, difficult, are removed : and the true art of contraction or abreviation [sic] of sentences is taught, by which such as have learned any other methods of short-writing, may, without leaving their old characters, learn to write whole sentences, as short as now single words. Printed for the author.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Facy, William. The Complement of Stenography, or, The Power of the Pen Displayed in a New Art of Charactery: Being a More Speedier, Swifter and Compendious Method of Short-writing, Then Heretofore Hath Been by Any Other Composed : So Far from Over-burdening Memory, That It Teaches the True Art of Memory in Which All Those Inconveniences Which Are Found in Other Methods to the Discouragement of Learners and Rendring [sic] the Reading of What According to Them Hath Been Written, Difficult, Are Removed : And the True Art of Contraction or Abreviation [sic] of Sentences Is Taught, by Which Such as Have Learned Any Other Methods of Short-writing, May, Without Leaving Their Old Characters, Learn to Write Whole Sentences, as Short as Now Single Words. London: Printed for the author, 1672.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Facy, William. The Complement of Stenography, or, The Power of the Pen Displayed in a New Art of Charactery: Being a More Speedier, Swifter and Compendious Method of Short-writing, Then Heretofore Hath Been by Any Other Composed : So Far from Over-burdening Memory, That It Teaches the True Art of Memory in Which All Those Inconveniences Which Are Found in Other Methods to the Discouragement of Learners and Rendring [sic] the Reading of What According to Them Hath Been Written, Difficult, Are Removed : And the True Art of Contraction or Abreviation [sic] of Sentences Is Taught, by Which Such as Have Learned Any Other Methods of Short-writing, May, Without Leaving Their Old Characters, Learn to Write Whole Sentences, as Short as Now Single Words. Printed for the author, 1672.

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