Dictionary Definition
cursive adj : having successive letter joined
together; "cursive script" n : rapid handwriting in which letters
are set down in full and cursively connected within words without
lifting the writing implement from the paper [syn: longhand, running
hand, cursive
script]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
cursive- having successive letters joined together
Noun
- A cursive character, letter or font.
- A manuscript written in cursive characters.
Translations
- German: Kursivschrift
- Italian: corsivo
- Japanese: 草書 (そうしょ, sōsho; for kanji or kana); 筆記体 (ひっきたい, hikkitai; for Latin or Greek letters, etc.)
Derived terms
See also
Extensive Definition
- For the indie rock band, see Cursive (band).
Cursive is any style of handwriting that is designed
for writing down notes and letters by hand. In the Latin and
Cyrillic
languages the letters in a word are connected, making a word one
single complex stroke. In British
English, the phrase "joined-up writing" is far more commonly
used, while the term "running writing" or "link script" is
sometimes used in Australia. Cursive is considered distinct from
the so-called "printing"
or "block
letter" style of handwriting, in which the letters of a word
are unconnected, and from "print-writing", which is a cross between
cursive and printing, with some unconnected letters and some
connected. In the Hebrew
cursive and Roman
cursive, the letters are not connected.
Cursive English
In the handwriting of William Bradford, in the early seventeenth century, most of the letters were separate, but a few were joined as in a cursive hand. By the late eighteenth century, a century and a half later, the situation had reversed; in Thomas Jefferson's draft of the United States Declaration of Independence most but not all of the letters were joined. The presentation copy of the Declaration, written professionally a few days later, was written in a fully cursive hand. Eighty-seven years later, in the middle of the nineteenth century, Abraham Lincoln drafted the Gettysburg Address in a cursive hand that would not look out of place today.In the eighteenth
and nineteenth
centuries, before the development of the typewriter, professional
correspondence was written in cursive. This was called a "fair
hand", meaning it looked good, and all clerks in a firm were
trained to write in the exact same script. In the early days of the
post
office, letters were written in cursive — and to fit
more text on a single sheet, the text was continued in lines
crossing at 90 degrees from the original text. Block letters could
not do this.
Although women's handwriting had noticeably
different particulars from men's, the general forms were not prone
to rapid change. In the mid-nineteenth
century, comparatively few children were not taught cursive,
and as it was an important skill, more emphasis could be placed on
learning it; there was no pervasive striving for efficiency in the
classroom. Few simplifications appeared as the middle of the
twentieth
century was reached. An example of the timeframe in which
cursive came to be taught is that in the United
States, it would usually be taught in second or third grade
(around ages seven to nine).
After the 1960s, it was decided
that the teaching of cursive writing was more difficult than it
needed to be. Forms of simply slanted characters, termed italic, were
argued as being easier and traditional cursive unnecessary. Also,
the copyrighting of
handwritten letter forms as a sort of typeface became profitable.
Because of this, a number of various new forms of cursive appeared
in the late twentieth century; D'Nealian and
Zaner-Bloser
are two of them. With the range of options available, handwriting
became unstandardized across different school systems in different
English-speaking countries.
With the advent of computers, cursive as a way of
formalizing correspondence has fallen out of favor. Any task which
would have once required a "fair hand" is now done using word
processing and a printer.
Increasingly, the teaching of cursive is being de-emphasized in
schools, and is generally reserved only for situations such as
timed tests with large writing portions, where it is considered
faster, although this use too is falling out of favor. Many teens
and young adults in Europe and North America no longer use cursive
at all, although some often connect letters when printing in ways
that are not considered correct in cursive, such as joining the
cross-bar of a "t" to a following "i".
Cursive Hebrew
Cursive Hebrew script is a style of Hebrew
calligraphy that is very popular for writing Modern
Hebrew by hand, since it is easier to learn and faster to write
than the traditional Hebrew
script. It features round letter shapes as opposed to the
standard "square" Hebrew script. Like other cursive systems, it was
designed to make writing down notes easier.
Cursive Roman
Roman cursive is a form of handwriting (or a
script) used in ancient Rome
and to some extent into the Middle Ages.
It is customarily divided into old (or ancient) cursive, and new
cursive. Old Roman cursive, also called majuscule cursive and
capitalis cursive, was the everyday form of handwriting used for
writing letters, by merchants writing business accounts, by
schoolchildren learning the Roman
alphabet, and even emperors
issuing commands. New Roman cursive, also called minuscule cursive or later
Roman cursive, developed from old Roman cursive. It was used from
approximately the 3rd century to the 7th century,
and uses letter forms that are more recognizable to modern eyes;
"a", "b", "d", and "e" have taken a more familiar shape, and the
other letters are proportionate to each other rather than varying
wildly in size and placement on a line.
Cursive Greek
The Greek alphabet has had several cursive forms in the course of its development. In antiquity, a cursive form of handwriting was used in writing on papyrus. It employed slanted and partly connected letter forms as well as many ligatures. Some features of this handwriting were later adopted into Greek minuscule, the dominant form of handwriting in the medieval and early modern era. In the 19th and 20th centuries, an entirely new form of cursive Greek, more similar to contemporary Western European cursive scripts, was developed.Cursive Russian
The Russian Cursive Cyrillic alphabet
is used (instead of the block
letters) when handwriting the modern Russian
Language. Some letters look much like Latin/Roman cursive
alphabet letters but most have different sounds. Most handwritten
Russian, especially personal letters and schoolwork uses the
cursive Russian (Cyrillic) alphabet. Most children in Russian
schools are taught by 1st grade how to write using this Russian
script.
Cursive Chinese
Cursive forms of Chinese characters are used in calligraphy; "running script" is the semi-cursive form and "grass script" is the cursive.References
See also
- Cursive script (Grass script)
- Paper
- Pen
- Penmanship
- Spencerian Script
- Emphasis
- Kurrent
External links
- Lessons in Calligraphy and Penmanship, including scans of classic nineteenth-century and early twentieth-century manuals and examples
- The Golden Age of American Penmanship, including scans of the January 1932 issue of Austin Norman Palmer's American Penman
- Download Normal and Bold Victorian Modern Cursive electronic fonts
cursive in Czech: Psací písmo
cursive in German: Kursive
cursive in Spanish: Cursiva
cursive in Finnish: Käsiala
cursive in French: Cursive
cursive in Galician: Cursiva
cursive in Hebrew: כתב יד (כתב)
cursive in Italian: Scrittura corsiva
cursive in Japanese: 筆記体
cursive in Korean: 필기체
cursive in Dutch: Handschrift (persoon)
cursive in Russian: Почерк
cursive in Swedish: Skrivstil
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Italian hand, Spencerian writing, autograph, autographic, block letter,
bold hand, book hand, calligraphic, chancery
hand, chirographic,
copperplate hand, cursive hand, effortless, engrossed, flowing, fluent, graphic, graphoanalytic, graphologic, graphometric, holograph, holographic, in longhand, in
shorthand, in writing, inscribed, italic, italicized, law hand,
lettering, longhand, majuscule script,
manuscript, minuscule
script, on paper, penciled, penned, printed, printing, round hand, running, scriptorial, scriptural, shorthand, smooth, stylographic, text hand,
uncial, written