Lesson 40: When to leave the "T" out of the end of words in Gregg Shorthand
A quick guide to phrase forms and when it's okay to omit words ending in "T" sounds.
Welcome back to the Learn Gregg Shorthand project! Just getting started with Gregg Shorthand? Check out the Archive and begin with Lesson 0.
If you find this helpful, drop a heart or restack the post! It really helps me to make better learning materials. If you get stuck, post your comments/questions, and I will answer every single one.
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.
Review: Translate and trace the forms from previous lesson
do not believe, they don’t, you do not, to make, it may be, at any, at any time,
what to do, in due course, I had, you had, who had, it was not, I was not,
it is not, it wasn’t, he is not, which is not, I am not, sending, unofficial,
coming, recourse, discourse.
Often, the “T” sound can be left out of certain shorthand forms:
(a) Best, rest, test, contest, protest, invest, honest, request,
past, last, just, adjust, insist, consist, persist, exist, cost.
(b) Act, enact, fact, exact, project, affect, conduct,
product, adapt, adopt, evident, student, highest, earliest.
In cases where the terminal “T” is not obvious, its good form to include it.
Lost, east, fast, cast, vast, least, dust, taste, missed,
mixed, post, coast, worst, distant, intent, content, extent, patent.
Reading and Writing Exercises
Download your free Gregg Ruled Practice Paper
“CHOICES”
That’s it for today! Be on the lookout for the solutions sent later this week.
I truly appreciate you tuning in and being part of this Gregg Shorthand learning journey! Your enthusiasm and dedication make this project worthwhile, and I’m excited to keep learning alongside you.
Have any questions or feedback?
I’d love to hear your thoughts—let me know in the comments if these lessons are helpful or if there’s anything I can improve. The comments section is also a great place to go if you are stuck.
Grab my digital learning content—like the Gregg-Ruled Drill Sheet on my Shopify store. It’s a simple way to invest in your shorthand practice while supporting this project.
Most importantly, share this newsletter with a friend! Learning is always more fun (and effective) when you have someone to practice with. Let’s build a community of shorthand learners together.