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The quick brown fox jumps over :marseyitsover: the lazy :marseyantiwork2: dog

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The earliest known appearance of the phrase was in The Boston :marseytf2scout: Journal. In an article titled "Current Notes" in the February 9, 1885, edition, the phrase is mentioned as a good :marseyfeelsgood: practice sentence for writing :marseynotes: students: "A favorite :mersya: copy set by writing :marseynotesglow: teachers for their pupils is the following, because it contains every letter of the alphabet: 'A quick brown fox jumps over :marseygiveup: the lazy :marseyantiwork2: dog.'"[2] Dozens of other newspapers published the phrase over :marseygiveup: the next few months, all using the version of the sentence starting with "A" rather than "The".[3] The earliest known use of the phrase starting with "The" is from the 1888 book :marseymaoist: Illustrative Shorthand by Linda Bronson.[4] The modern :marseyschizomajorgenerallove: form (starting with "The") became more common even though it is slightly longer than the original (starting with "A").

A 1908 edition of the Los Angeles Herald Sunday Magazine records that when the New York Herald was equipping an office with typewriters "a few years ago", staff found :marseymissing2: that the common practice sentence of "now is the time :marseywait: for all good :marseysoutherner: men to come to the aid of the party" did not familiarize typists with the entire alphabet, and ran onto two lines in a newspaper column. They write that a staff member named Arthur F. Curtis invented the "quick brown fox" pangram to address this.[5]

As the use of typewriters grew in the late :marseyslowpoke: 19th :marseysuffragette: century, the phrase began :marseyitsover: appearing in typing lesson books :marseysexylibrarian: as a practice sentence. Early examples include How to Become Expert in Typewriting: A Complete Instructor Designed Especially for the Remington Typewriter (1890),[6] and Typewriting Instructor and Stenographer's Hand-book (1892). By the turn :marseyhillary: of the 20th century, the phrase had become widely known. In the January 10, 1903, issue of Pitman's Phonetic Journal, it is referred to as "the well :marseyclapping: known memorized typing line :marseypunisher: embracing :marseyembrace: all the letters of the alphabet".[7] Robert Baden-Powell's book :marseyreading: Scouting for Boys (1908) uses the phrase as a practice sentence for signaling.

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That's great and all, but I asked for my burger without cheese.

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