What's the difference between logography and longhand?
Logography
Definition:
(n.) A method of printing in which whole words or syllables, cast as single types, are used.
(n.) A mode of reporting speeches without using shorthand, -- a number of reporters, each in succession, taking down three or four words.
Example Sentences:
Longhand
Definition:
(n.) The written characters used in the common method of writing; -- opposed to shorthand.
Example Sentences:
(1) King finished the outline at about midnight and then wrote a draft in longhand.
(2) Maybe it was the peace and quiet of the cosy, carpeted, sun-drenched study at home in Chappaqua, upstate New York, with views over the treetops, where she wrote much of Hard Choices in longhand.
(3) A Princeton University spokesman said: "The story is probably an unauthorised version transcribed longhand in our reading room.
(4) I still write longhand with a pencil and retype the manuscript, slowly, with my right hand.
(5) The midges were discouraging longhand explanations, so I said that a friend of mine had written a book called Waterlog about wild swimming, and now I couldn't keep out of the water.
(6) Dr Holland made his comments on the case in shorthand and his instructions in longhand.
(7) I don't think there is any doubt that a trained typist can type faster and more legibly than it is possible to write in longhand.
(8) Gessen, a founder of the combative literary journal N+1 who writes in longhand to avoid being distracted by the internet, told Gould never to read the article, but then Twitter went into full-on hyperventilation mode as other women came forward to accuse Champion of harassing them online.