What's the difference between scenography and stenography?

Scenography


Definition:

  • (n.) The art or act of representing a body on a perspective plane; also, a representation or description of a body, in all its dimensions, as it appears to the eye.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The ancient Greeks and Romans created mechanical platforms as devices for scenography in theatres.

Stenography


Definition:

  • (n.) The art of writing in shorthand, by using abbreviations or characters for whole words; shorthand.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) A proficient stenographer who had had cerebral metastases suffered from pure alexia for normal print but could still read stenography with ease.
  • (2) For five years stenography paid the bills, slowly supplemented by articles for Vogue based on afternoons traipsing the fur and diamond districts; she wrote features for local papers, joined the staff of a metal trade gazette and then the office of war information.
  • (3) We suggest that a reduction of exposure duration, together with the strong visuo-spatial features in stenography, activate right-hemispheric word recognition.
  • (4) Our media's Isis threat hype machine: government stenography at its worst | Trevor Timm Read more But he cautioned the national conversation about security policy needed to proceed “in a considered manner respectful of the views and experience of others”.
  • (5) It veers between hysteria (the "I'm so angry because" school of commentary) and stenography.
  • (6) It is suggested that especially the visuospatial properties of stenography made possible "alternative" reading, most likely via the right hemisphere.
  • (7) Stenography, a non-orthographic and syllabic-ideographic writing system, could be a model to investigate different hemispheric reading processes in Western subjects.
  • (8) In two lateralized tachistoscopic lexical decision experiments at different exposure durations, we found for high-frequency function words written in stenography a shift from a RVF advantage at long exposures to a LVF advantage at short exposures, while for the same words written in print a strong RVF effect persisted.

Words possibly related to "scenography"