- cross-posted to:
- itsme
- cross-posted to:
- itsme
After like 5 tries and squinting and using my finger to block lines as I went along, I managed to verify for myself that it does in fact have the proper amount of lines.
It’s not just the correct amount of lines but connections between the lines are actually there, if they should be that is, if you look closely.
Oh shit you’re right
Wow. You really had to zoom in for that one. +2 to the artist for such attention to detail.
deleted by creator
Thank you for your service.
Мишки лишили шиншилл лилии, шиншиллы лишили мишек шишки
(Bears stole lily from chinchillas, chinchillas stole cone from bears)
What the fuck
It’s easier to read after a few pints of vodka
Mental illness
Such a beautiful language
Well, that’s why you add dots and stuff over the letters so it becomes “easy” to distinguish. Example Kurrent script:
Bonus points for actually connecting the “fence posts” at the correct spots to form “minimum”.
Wow! This is just what I often joke about to my friends. I write in such heavy cursives that when I write words like Minimum or Aluminium, they become hard to read for anyone else.
Your Aluminum having an extra “i” might contribute
I just noticed that it was the same person responding both times. He took that like a champ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aluminium The Americans have one less «i», not the other way around.
Sounds like the British guy who discovered it settled on the spelling without the extra i
A January 1811 summary of one of Davy’s lectures at the Royal Society mentioned the name aluminium as a possibility. The next year, Davy published a chemistry textbook in which he used the spelling aluminum.
Kinda seems like there was a typo and it just stuck.
It was called aluminum for a long time universally. Everyone else changed to aluminium when it was discovered to be an element and was renamed to meet the naming scheme of the time
America kept the old word. I’m half surprised America doesn’t call gold aurium
Do you not think that textbook would have multiple places where they use that word?
Is the word only ever written in the one textbook, then?
Im saying that it’s not a typo if the creator of a word spells it a certain way multiple times in a book. They clearly meant to spell it that way when they were writing the book.
deleted by creator
Letting go of the colonies was a mistake
deleted by creator
calligraphy has a patron demon, not a patron saint
Titivillus has also been described as collecting idle chat that occurs during church service, and mispronounced, mumbled or skipped words of the service, to take to Hell to be counted against the offenders
Damn…that narc needs to RELAX 😆
he has an entire cult of followers, its hilarious.
(I probably just triggered them all.)
When you say “an entire cult of followers”, do you actually mean a handful of the weirdest dudes in the Vatican?
oh… no. I mean hordes of slathering buffon’s who jump on social media posts with typos.
(ooops. I did it again.)
Well when you’re THAT stupid, you deserve to be triggered via mockery lol
So glad we can just blame autocorrect for everything.
So halts wet can just blame disorient food entitling
If you can’t be arsed proof reading
Devil is in the details
I get very anxious when someone starts such a long word so far to the right* of the page.
* obviously only for LTR direction
This, ladies and gentlemen, is what makes transcribing some very olde texts REALLY fucking hard.
Like the texts in the tabletop Warhammer 1st edition campaign. Only one character in the party can read because of literacy in that universe and era. I understand why.
Keming
Source: Fossil Fools #135 - Minim (Calligraphy)
I don’t see an RSS Feed on their site, so here it is the RSS Feed for u/fossilfoolscomic’s submissions to r/comics:
https://www.reddit.com/r/comics/search/.rss?q=author:“fossilfoolscomic”&include_over_18=on&restrict_sr=on&t=all&sort=newIs this how calligraphy looks to people who can’t read cursive?
Being from somewhere where everyone learns cursive and most use it in handwriting, I was very surprised when I learned a lot of (mostly American?) people can’t make any sense of it at all.
I remember a guy posting an old handwritten letter on Reddit, just asking for a transcript. And while I agree many people have terrible handwriting that is absolutely undecipherable for anyone but themselves (if at all), this was not the case at all here.
I understand why that would be a problem if someone never learned it or only in passing and never used it again, but it’s so weird being able to read something naturally with no effort while others treat it like a mysterious cryptogram.
I guess they have stopped teaching it at some of schools in the United States. The kids that don’t know it are really passionate about why they don’t need to know it, to the point of calling it stupid. I made some arguments in a post about it a week ago and they’re adamant that they don’t need and don’t want it. Obviously I think people should still learn it, but I don’t sit on a school board.
I think cursive is a low priority on a list of increasingly important extracurricular topics.
I was taught how to write cursive before I emigrated to Ireland. When I arrived cursive writing isn’t being used in the country. And to be honest, learning cursive is pointless. Like, why? It developed as a pretentious way to write by the elites in the past. We’re learning how to write “normal” to start with when we were just starting in school. Then later on we’re taught to write in cursive when we could write in more easily legible and readable separated letters. The advent of the computer and emails have made handwriting largely obsolete anyhow.
I’ve read an article of a professor lamenting the fact that new generations are not being taught how to write and read cursive. Admonishing who would be able to read old cursive handwritings for historical research and posterity. The professor may feel nostalgic for the old ways, but has it occurred to him that cursive writing is a relic of the past, and reading it could be done by a specialist historian, same way as someone who reads Sumerian cuneiform?
Well one use for cursive is to help dyslexic kids. it makes it easier for them to write and spell
I mean it’s an objectively worse writing system. All caps printing is the most legible, and as writing is a form of communication, clarity is paramount.
I’m also very surprised no one has started calling it racist yet because of it’s origins and which demographics historically used it. “Linguistic prescriptivism” is racist now, but handwriting is still A okay.
Fuck off Russian cursive
You’re upsetting шиншилла
All I see is MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
Is this what dyslexia is like?
Take a word like, “minimum;” to choose a random word.
For anyone to say they cannot read it is absurd!– Tom Lehrer, The Professor’s Song