Lesson 35: How to Write ‘Do Not’ and ‘Don’t’ in Gregg Shorthand Using the [den] Blend
Includes Extra Reading Practice and New Special Forms to Boost Your Gregg Shorthand Comprehension
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For the following assignment:
Reread the list of words and phrases at the beginning of each assignment
After you understand each form, print out and trace the list of words and phrases at the beginning of each assignment
Read the connected matter in shorthand (the reading homework), and once you understand it, copy the forms into a lined notebook (or use the free Gregg-Ruled worksheet attached to each lesson)
Ready to learn? Let’s dive in.
Let’s start by translating and tracing the forms from previous lessons:
Ready, reader, readers, leader, leaders,
many, manner, manners, any, near, nears,
day, dare, dares, tea, tear, tears, me, mere, she, sheer.
When a pronoun comes before “do not,” use the [den] blend. For example:
I do not, I do not see, I do not know, I do not believe, we do not, we do not believe, they do not, they do not know, you do not, you do not know.
“Don’t” is written as don to distinguish it from “do not.”
I don't, we don't, they don't, I don't believe, I don't know, we don't know.
Memorize the following special forms:
Abstract, accommodation, accompany, administration, affidavit, afraid,
American, application, approval, architect, argument,
assist, Atlantic, attach, attorney, attract, authoritative,
automobile, avoid, bankrupt, bookkeeper, bureau.
Reading and Writing Exercises
Download your free Gregg Ruled Practice Paper
“A SACRIFICE”
(420 standard words + bonus letters)
Have any questions or feedback?
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That’s it for today! Be on the lookout for the solutions sent later this week.
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