Farthing, J. (1654). Short-writing shortned, or, The art of short-writing reduced to a method more speedy, plain, exact, and easie, then hath been heretofore published: In which, the principall difficulties and discouragements that have been found in short-writing, particularly the burthening of memory with, and inconvenient joyning of many characters, are removed : and the whole art so disposed, that all usual words may be written with aptnesse and brevity. Printed for Tho. Underhill, and are to be sold at the Blew Anchor in Pauls Church-yard, and by the authour at his house in Olaves-Street in Southwark, and at his chamber in the house that was Alderman Freemans in Cornhill, near the Royall Exchange.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationFarthing, John. Short-writing Shortned, or, The Art of Short-writing Reduced to a Method More Speedy, Plain, Exact, and Easie, Then Hath Been Heretofore Published: In Which, the Principall Difficulties and Discouragements That Have Been Found in Short-writing, Particularly the Burthening of Memory with, and Inconvenient Joyning of Many Characters, Are Removed : And the Whole Art so Disposed, That All Usual Words May Be Written with Aptnesse and Brevity. London: Printed for Tho. Underhill, and are to be sold at the Blew Anchor in Pauls Church-yard, and by the authour at his house in Olaves-Street in Southwark, and at his chamber in the house that was Alderman Freemans in Cornhill, near the Royall Exchange, 1654.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationFarthing, John. Short-writing Shortned, or, The Art of Short-writing Reduced to a Method More Speedy, Plain, Exact, and Easie, Then Hath Been Heretofore Published: In Which, the Principall Difficulties and Discouragements That Have Been Found in Short-writing, Particularly the Burthening of Memory with, and Inconvenient Joyning of Many Characters, Are Removed : And the Whole Art so Disposed, That All Usual Words May Be Written with Aptnesse and Brevity. Printed for Tho. Underhill, and are to be sold at the Blew Anchor in Pauls Church-yard, and by the authour at his house in Olaves-Street in Southwark, and at his chamber in the house that was Alderman Freemans in Cornhill, near the Royall Exchange, 1654.