0 someone who types and does shorthand as the main part of their job
1 a person who does shorthand (= system of fast writing) in an office or records speech using a special machine in a court
2 someone whose job is to do stenography (= a system of writing quickly using lines and symbols)
The rest of the nation's stenographers were strong enough and the phonograph fragile enough to end that association for most other subsidiaries by 1890.
As for the discussions of corporations, taxes, the federal government, suffrage, labor, and questions of race, stenographers and newspaper reporters recorded it all.
Category two, which represents the second quarter of the income distribution, includes cashiers, stenographers and typists, apprentices of various sorts, telegraph messengers, shoe repairmen, barbers, and teamsters.
Each of these very important and faithful servants of the public has an office and a stenographer.
The case was so important to her that she asked stenographers for a full report.
The court stenographer is also dead and his notes have been destroyed.
If that were so, he would have to have half a dozen stenographers for the purpose.
The ordinary stenographer takes 100 or 120 words a minute; this work goes up to 200 words or about that a minute.