Cursive Writing

What is your opinion of cursive writing?


  • Total voters
    89
I think “joined up writing” can refer to writing with a connection between the letters whereas cursive is a script separate from print letters. You can join up your print letters, and you can separate your cursive letters, but in general print letters are kept separate and cursive is joined.
Well according to Almighty Wikipedia, "cursive" basically just means "joined up":
In the United States of America, the name "cursive" is most commonly used to describe the method of writing that instructs students to join every letter in all words. In the United Kingdom, the phrase "joined-up writing" or "joint writing" is far more commonly used, while the term "running writing" or "handwriting" is most commonly used in Australia. Cursive is also commonly known as simply "handwriting" in Canada and New Zealand.
 
Well according to Almighty Wikipedia, "cursive" basically just means "joined up":


It also states that: "Note that not all such cursive, then or now, joined all of the letters within a word."

So the distinction can be made between cursive (as a script) and joining up letters, if one wants to be pedantic. Which I guess I am being.
 
It also states that: "Note that not all such cursive, then or now, joined all of the letters within a word."

So the distinction can be made between cursive (as a script) and joining up letters, if one wants to be pedantic. Which I guess I am being.
Oh, well, I stopped reading after I found a part of the text that agreed with my own opinion. :smug:
 
I prefer my printed script over cursive. It's only faster if you practice it, and given that I have practiced in printed script over cursive, it is both faster, more legible, easier, etc. I'd be a fool not to print.

Plus, I'm convinced that the "advantages" of cursive are largely lost if you are left-handed--it's far more uncomfortable than printing, and the speed difference is less significant because you have to push the pen over pulling it.
 
I prefer my printed script over cursive. It's only faster if you practice it, and given that I have practiced in printed script over cursive, it is both faster, more legible, easier, etc. I'd be a fool not to print.

Plus, I'm convinced that the "advantages" of cursive are largely lost if you are left-handed--it's far more uncomfortable than printing, and the speed difference is less significant because you have to push the pen over pulling it.

If you're pressing down hard enough for there to be "pushing" or "pulling" involved, you're not writing very efficiently anyway.

I write with quality pens, and just press enough for them to make ink lines on my paper.
 
Vastly prefer print. I have little patience for fancy touches in writing.
 
Someday I will start using cursive just so that my grandchildren cannot read the "secret code"... :mischief:

...though then they'll just take a picture of it from their smartwrist implant and immediately have the typed-out decryption read aloud to them. :(
 
If you're pressing down hard enough for there to be "pushing" or "pulling" involved, you're not writing very efficiently anyway.

I write with quality pens, and just press enough for them to make ink lines on my paper.

If you are left-handed and writing left-to-right, you have to push the pen across the page. If you are right-handed, you have to pull it across the page.
 
No, it's not. I can print wayyy faster than I can write in cursive, and the notes are always neater/more legible to boot.

Practice makes a big difference here.

Most people I know, including myself, write much faster in cursive, you are likely an exception to the rule. But as you said, it's certainly more legible to use a manuscript form of writing.
 
I find print isn't that much slower. And I prefer to read print too.
 
No, it's not. I can print wayyy faster than I can write in cursive, and the notes are always neater/more legible to boot.

Practice makes a big difference here.
This and....

I find print isn't that much slower. And I prefer to read print too.
This. When you look at a newspaper, it isn't printed in cursive. There's a reason for that.
 
Back
Top Bottom