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stenographic

[ US /ˌstɛnəˈɡɹæfɪk/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. of or relating to or employing stenography

How To Use stenographic In A Sentence

  • There should be a full stenographic record of the hearing available to the parties concerned.
  • She and Nancy corresponded daily in the "pothooks," as Jennie Bruce called the stenographic signs. A Little Miss Nobody Or, With the Girls of Pinewood Hall
  • Sales included a rare first edition of Sir Isaac's stenographic shorthand from 1837, which fetched £763 and a £2,115 manuscript volume of his correspondence in shorthand between 1839 and 1843.
  • More insidious than the numerous hothead pundits are the far more numerous reporters who can't stop providing stenographic services to official sources under the guise of journalism.
  • But it's treated rather blithely in a stenographic US media, with little attention to its substance or peril. William Bradley: Drifting to War with Iran: Beware the Hysteria
  • The paper encourages reporters to incorporate analysis into their reporting rather than compose a stenographic procession of facts, quotations, and official denials, allowing it in many cases to get closer to the truth than its rivals.
  • Journalists don't "journalize," they just report, that is, jot down stenographically everything and anything unchallenged. The Latest on Air America
  • TP U BG, which supposedly means “FUCK” in stenographic shorthand, or SHTHPNS), it may not discriminate based on viewpoint (for instance, because ARYAN-1 conveys a “message of racial superiority”), nor may it use standards that are so vague that they can be a cloak for viewpoint discrimination (e.g., a “contrary to public policy” standard). The Volokh Conspiracy » (Maybe) Racist Vanity Plates and the First Amendment
  • I followed the Nixon Watergate stories breathlessly, but the Post has become much too comfortable with error and slipshod (stenographic) reporting. Matthew Yglesias » A Suggested Correction for George Will
  • Media lapdogs are marked by stenographic tendencies, sympathetic frames and a reliance on industry jargon. Max Stanley: How Revisionist Reporting Hurts Everyone
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