• @lingh0e
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    910 months ago

    That’s cursive. It’s literally joined up writing.

    • @[email protected]
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      610 months ago

      There are different types of cursive just as there are different types of joined up writing. There may be some overlap. Also, in the US people don’t generally use the term joined up writing.

      • @lingh0e
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        -810 months ago

        That’s literally the cursive alphabet that was taught in American public schools. And most people reading the question would understand that cursive is, in fact, “joined up writing”.

        • @[email protected]
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          510 months ago

          the cursive alphabet

          Not every school teaches Zaner Bloser, especially these days-- see this for example. And I was told by some British friends over the years that joined up writing has some differences, though I’m not too familiar with the particulars. I thought joined up writing was more like this, though maybe it is just a matter of terminology.

          • @[email protected]
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            210 months ago

            For that second one, I would normally think of it as cursive, except by someone who substituted in print letters where they couldn’t remember

          • @lingh0e
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            -210 months ago

            Dude, you’re being overly pedantic over a few things I typed while entirely ignoring other parts.

            The image you posted was the exact cursive alphabet that was taught in American public schools. It was THE curriculum. I’m not debating the existence of alternate styles of cursive writing. I’m saying that kids in America learned a specific style of “joined up writing” and that style was the image you posted.

            • @[email protected]
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              510 months ago

              When I learned how to write in “cursive” in a south Florida elementary school (early 00s), I learned that “Zaner Bloser” style he posted above. However, I’ve never heard the term “joined up writing” before today. I think you’re both just mistaking regional terms for standardized ones.

            • Encrypt-Keeper
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              10 months ago

              When I hear “joined-up writing” I envision his second picture. Cursive would be the first. Cursive is a type of joined-up writing but here in the US when we refer to the writing in the first image just call it cursive. Why would we use a more generic term when we have a more specific term?

    • Encrypt-Keeper
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      410 months ago

      You can write regular print letters joined up which is pretty common. Cursive letters however are approximations of letters that don’t look a whole lot like their print counterparts.

      • @lingh0e
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        610 months ago

        The word “cursive” as it colloquially understood in America is the exact alphabet posted in the above image.

        If you ask almost any American GenX or older "hey, what is the word for ‘joined up writing’ ", they will answer “cursive”, and they will be specifically thinking of that precise style.

        Meanwhile I have two kids who JUST learned to read and they are both able to read cursive. They have not been formally taught this style, and any attempt they’d take at writing it would likely be an illegible mess, but they absolutely can understand it.

        • Encrypt-Keeper
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          10 months ago

          Exactly my point, cursive refers to that exact style of joined-up writing. It is not a word which refers to any and all joined-up writing. If you ask almost any American what cursive is, they’ll point to the style as shown in the first image.

          If you ask almost any American what “joined-up writing” is, they’ll point to the style in the second image. Because if you were referring to Cursive, you would have said cursive, not joined-up writing.

          If you avoid using the very common specific term for something in favor of a less common, more general term, people will assume you’re not referring to the more specific thing, because you’ve gone out of your way to not use the specific term.