Wednesday, 6 February 2013

trengkas

TRENGKAS (untuk kemahiran)


Kemahiran trengkas ini boleh dipelajari oleh sesiapa sahaja mudah dan cepat. Boleh belajar melalui buku atau belajar di rumah secara persendirian. Banyak kegunaannya terutama untuk pekerjaan seperti SETIAUSAHA/JURUTRENKGAS/PEMBERITA dll. dan kepada  pelajar-pelajar MEMUDAHKAN MENGAMBIL CATITAN PENTING dengan CEPAT & BANYAK  terutama semasa mengahadiri kelas atau kuliah. Ianya juga untuk  mengisi borang kerja kerajaan dimana dinyatakan kelajuan menaip dan juga kelajuan trengkas & lesen memandu.

TRENGKAS -> LATIHAN -> KEMAHIRAN = PENGGABUNGAN ANTARA PERKATAAN & RINGKASAN.

Isi Kandungan Pembelajaran :
  1. Asas (Huruf Benar Trengkas, Huruf Saksi, Penyambungan Ayat, Penambahan & Saksi Berkait Rapat)
  2. Pertengahan (Pemendekan H, S,N, W, NG, L & R)
  3. Menengah (Ringkasan, Terjemahan & Kelajuan dari 25psm - 100psm)

handwriter summary

Handywrite System Summary

 

System summary
To better understand the above, study the following. Notice how, in the examples, each sound is often spelled several different ways.

Consonants: (as in....)

n m    knit—mit knife—calm (no l sound)
t d two—d, stopped (one p, ends in t)—fiddle 
k g coat—goat , backghost 
r l rake—lake wrong—tell 
p b pin—been , happy (only one p sound)—rabbit 
f v fairy—very , laugh—of (v not f)
h w how—wow who (starts with h)—wine 

sh ch shin—chin , ocean—watch 
("ch" is the sound of t+sh, but gets a symbol of its own)
zh j azure—jam , measure—bridge
("j" is the sound of d+zh as in "edge")
ng nk sing—sink , long—lank 
("nk" is the sound of ng+k)
Th th thin—then (same vowel) thigh—breathe 
("Thin" and "then" are the only two common words distinguished solely by the two forms of th, so if you get them mixed up writing other words, no big deal. By the way, the "th" in "then" or "the" occurs about ten times more often in writing than "Th" in "thin" or "think")
s z sin—zen scent—has 
(s, z, and x may curve two ways, whichever seems best)
x y example—yet extra—onion 
("x" is the sound of k+s in fox, eh+k+s in extra, or eh+g+z in exact—if you need to be excruciatingly exact you could write extra as )
ll ny   llama—manana 
(These sounds are from foreign words such as "llama" when pronounced like "y" instead of "l." In Spain "ll" is like the "lli" in "million." The "ny" sound is the "ñ" in "mañana" or "canyon")

Vowels: (as in...)

ae    bat , plaid , half , laugh, can 
glad 
eh   bet , many , said , says , bread 
leopard 
ih   bit , mini , Sid , busy , women 
hymn
  bot or bought, father , Don , far , caught 
heart 
uh   but , done , alone , circus , pencil 
ey    bait , age , aid , say , they , vein 
  beet , team , people , key , equal 
ay    bite , height , aisle , eye , lie , high 
(may be written with a forward or backward slant, but generally down)
  boat , sew , open , toe , beau , yeoman 
yu    butte , new , few , feud , beauty , view 
  boot , shoe , rule , blue , fruit , adieu 
  book, put , full , wolf , good , should 
au   bout , house , bough , now, towel 
oy    boil , boy , toil , voice , oil 
aw   bawl , dawn , law , yawl—y'all 
drawl 
(This is a minor vowel very close to the "short o" in Don. In practice this vowel sound can be represented by the  symbol without confusion. So "all" or "awl" could be written or and so forth, but if you need to distinguish between "dawn" and "Don" or "la" and "law," "tock" and "talk," then you can—these being the among the few examples I have encountered that differ solely on the basis of these vowel sounds. Some words, like "bought" (bawt) and "bot" (baht) may be pronounced the same by some people, and so may be written the same. Note that when writing this symbol there is always at least one sharp angle between it and a consonant to distinguish it from the vowels and which may also be tear shaped when they sometimes blend in with two consonants— in which case there is no angle.)
bur , bird , first , word , honor , zephyr 
(A little known or acknowledged fact: "r" is a vowel, not a consonant. Generations of English teachers have mislead you. While I did list "r" with the consonants, I'm now giving you the straight dope. A vowel sound is one you can make in a continuous manner using your vocal cords with mouth open until you run out of breath. Try it. Consonants are the various ways vowels can be modified at the beginning or end of them. Say "ahahahahahahahah," now say "rrrrrrrrrrrrr." Obviously "R" is a vowel. Some admit only that it's a semivowel, but I prefer to say the emperor has no clothes and claim it's a vowel. Next time you're around an English teacher or other language expert, argue this point ad nausium until they concede.)