English to Kannada Dictionary shorthand

shorthand

ಸಂಕ್ಷಿಪ್ತ
definition
noun
These notes are almost entirely written in Aramaic in a form of shorthand abbreviations.
a method of rapid writing by means of abbreviations and symbols, used especially for taking dictation. The major systems of shorthand are those devised in 1837 by Sir Isaac Pitman and in 1888 by John R. Gregg ( 1867–1948 ).
translation of 'shorthand'
ಶೀಘ್ರ ಲಿಪಿ,
ಸಂಕ್ಷಿಪ್ತ ಯಾ ಸಾಂಕೇತಿಕ ಅಭಿವ್ಯಕ್ತಿ
example
It doesn't often happen but when it does, the slogan provides a 'shorthand' for the entire campaign.
While part two gives you a nice 'shorthand' to get your point across, part one precludes the fact that something doesn't have to be new to be good.
Stories and our memory of them then provide both an interpretive function and a 'shorthand' for the business of interpretation.
Every meaningless name became 'shorthand' for a certain class status.
My flatmate and I use ‘dutch’ as a 'shorthand' for anything we disapprove of.
This focus seems to have gone from a useful 'shorthand' to an obsession.
Each page on the pads is filled with all sorts of bizarre 'shorthand' scribbled in a totally random fashion around the edges.
Sir Issac Pitman began the first correspondence course for his 'shorthand' system.
Otherwise, he would not be able to record the thoughts of Martin O'Neill, and would have to rely on 'shorthand' skills.
With the development of girls' education and the acquisition of typing and 'shorthand' skills, women increasingly made their mark on this sector.
These notes are almost entirely written in Aramaic in a form of 'shorthand' abbreviations.
A 'shorthand' system such as the Banff system is completely opaque to nonspecialists.
He and his brothers all helped out with reporting and were so skilled at 'shorthand' that each could read the other's verbatim notes.
poetry for him is simply a 'shorthand' for literature that has aesthetic value
Have we adopted a convenient 'shorthand' for a longer and more complete description of the object?
It becomes a touchstone, something that people can refer to, use as a 'shorthand' and take as a common foundation.
Hinduism is not a unified system of belief and practice, and should at best be regarded as a convenient 'shorthand' for a complex social and cultural phenomenon.
He even went to great lengths to conceal his work by writing in cryptic 'shorthand' or writing backwards.
But it is a useful 'shorthand' that signals both the wider ways in which dearer petrol hurts our economy and the sense of malignity from a distance.
When he was just 12, Mr Walton's father persuaded a local journalist to teach his son 'shorthand' in the hope that it would open doors to a better career.
Among the generals in the 1940s the 'shorthand' for being arrested and beaten up was ‘having coffee with Beria’.
It never prevailed over the more popular Pitman system of 'shorthand' , even though it was easier to write.
For journalists, it could well signal the death-knell of the spiral-bound notebook with its copious 'shorthand' notes.
Coleridge also gave lectures on general literature and philosophy, which have survived in the form of notes and 'shorthand' reports.
Now Bollywood is almost a 'shorthand' , a buzzword for one of the most happening trends in America.
Aptitude is also a 'shorthand' for social selection.
a 'shorthand' typist
Well I guess they do have some 'shorthand' or abbreviations but then, how do they remember them all?
poetry for him is simply a 'shorthand' for literature that has aesthetic value
While this may be a simplified description, it provides a useful 'shorthand' to examine the very different approaches of different disciplines.
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