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  2. Cursive Hebrew - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cursive_Hebrew

    Cursive Hebrew ( Hebrew: כתב עברי רהוט ktav ivri rahut, "flowing Hebrew writing", or כתב יד עברי ktav yad 'ivri, "Hebrew handwriting", often called simply כתב ktav, "writing") is a collective designation for several styles of handwriting the Hebrew alphabet. Modern Hebrew, especially in informal use in Israel, is ...

  3. Sütterlin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sütterlin

    Sütterlin is based on older German handwriting, which is a handwriting form of the Blackletter scripts such as Fraktur and Schwabacher, the German print scripts used at the same time. It includes the long s (ſ) as well as several standard ligatures such as ff (f-f), ſt (ſ-t), st (s-t), and ß (ſ-z or ſ-s).

  4. Italic type - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italic_type

    Italic is only used for the lower case and not for capitals. [ 1] In typography, italic type is a cursive font based on a stylised form of calligraphic handwriting. [ 2][ 3][ 4] Along with blackletter and roman type, it served as one of the major typefaces in the history of Western typography . Owing to the influence from calligraphy, italics ...

  5. Fraktur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fraktur

    A modern sans-serif and four blackletter typefaces (left to right): Textur (a), Rotunda, Schwabacher and Fraktur. Fraktur ( German: [fʁakˈtuːɐ̯] ⓘ) is a calligraphic hand of the Latin alphabet and any of several blackletter typefaces derived from this hand. It is designed such that the beginnings and ends of the individual strokes that ...

  6. Secretary hand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secretary_hand

    Secretary hand. "The secretarie Alphabete": an abecedarium showing the forms of the letters used in secretary hand, from a penmanship book by Jehan de Beau-Chesne and John Baildon, 1570. Secretary hand or script is a style of European handwriting developed in the early sixteenth century that remained common in the sixteenth and seventeenth ...

  7. Tengwar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tengwar

    The Tengwar ( / ˈtɛŋɡwɑːr /) script is an artificial script, one of several scripts created by J. R. R. Tolkien, the author of The Lord of the Rings . Within the fictional context of Middle-earth, the Tengwar were invented by the Elf Fëanor, and used first to write the Elven tongues Quenya and Telerin.

  8. Cursive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cursive

    Cursive is a style of penmanship in which the symbols of the language are written in a conjoined and/or flowing manner, generally for the purpose of making writing faster. . This writing style is distinct from "print-script" using block letters, in which the letters of a word are unconnected and in Roman/Gothic letterform rather than joined-up scri

  9. Unicode font - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode_font

    A Unicode font is a computer font that maps glyphs to code points defined in the Unicode Standard. [1] The vast majority of modern computer fonts use Unicode mappings, even those fonts which only include glyphs for a single writing system, or even only support the basic Latin alphabet.