Learning the cursive alphabet is the best guide to cursive writing. Many people approach cursive writing as a way to be more creative and use handwriting in more situations.
Back in the day, many kids were taught how to write using cursive letters at school. But this skill is less widely taught these days. The good news is that kids and adults alike (in fact, people of all ages) can learn the cursive alphabet with just a little bit of patience.
There are, in fact, many different ways to learn to write the cursive alphabet but some are more effective than others.
In this article, we will teach you one of the most effective methods there is. This method is perfect for children, but adults can also benefit from following it.
So, now, without much further ado, here is your guide to cursive letter writing.
What Do You Need to Know?
There are a few things that you need to be familiar with before you start learning (or teaching someone else) to do cursive letters.
You will need to use a cursive chart or worksheet (you can download that for free) and refer to it several times until you feel confident enough to write in cursive without it.
I went to an all-girlsβ Catholic school for, like, six years during the time when kids actually had handwriting class. Iβve always had a propensity for getting the cursive down pretty well. β Meghan Markle
Only practice one or two letters per lesson. It is far more effective to keep your cursive lessons short and only focus on one or two letters at the time.
The best thing is to internalize how to write each cursive letter before moving on to the next. Building up confidence is the most important thing to achieve in this method.
But there are a few specific things that anyone learning cursive writing must know.
Getting Started
The first thing to know is the position of each letter. All the cursive letters have a body line upon which they sit.
The second thing you will need to know is the right angle of cursive writing, which is always slightly slanted to the right.
Next, there is the shape of each cursive letter. The main difference between print letters and cursive letters is that in cursive the letters are rounded into ovals and not circles.
You will also need to know how to start and how to join letters. There is a sloping starting stroke for each letter that begins in the base body line. Just as important is to know how to end and join letters. All cursive letters end in a stroke at the upper base line.
And, finally, you will need to know that some letters have loops, sometimes at the bottom and sometimes at the top, depending on the letter in question.
Lower Case Letters
It is always a good idea to begin practicing with lower case letters.
The best letters to begin with are the ones with an upward stroke. They are the following letters: b, f, h, i, j, k, l, m, n, p, r, s, t, u, w, x, y.
Some of these letters require just one stroke while others just need one. Grab a pencil, a piece of paper, a worksheet, and get practicing.
Most of these lower letters stay within the top and the bottom line. Some of them go all the way to the bottom line, while others go all the way up. Only lower-case f goes beyond the bottom and the top lines.
Mastering these lower-case letters is the first big milestone before you can move on to other, more complex, letters.
But do not try to run before you can run. Begin with the lower-case letter u. This is, by far, the easiest cursive letter to write because it only requires one simple stroke. Practice u and when you have mastered it, you will have all you need to move on to i, j, m, n, r, v, w, y.
After those letters, move on to h. This letter will also give you the basis for letters b, f, and k.
Once you have mastered the lower-case upward stroke letters, you should try their curved stoker counterparts: a, c, d, e, g, o.
Lowercase o is the first one from this group you should attempt. And, when you have it, move on to g and then the rest of them: c, d, and e.
Uppercase Letters Β
Only attempt uppercase letters once you are confident enough that you have mastered the lowercase ones. If you have, congratulations, you are already halfway through mastering cursive writing.
The first group of letters you need to practice include the letters C, E, G, L, and O. Begin with L and then move on to the other ones in the same group.
Β
The next letter, R, is one of the most complex ones so it might take some practice to master it. But if you have gone this far and master all the previous letters you have all it takes to master R.
Once you get R, you can use variations on your method, so you can achieve B, D, F, I, J, P, and T.
If you use worksheets, follow the other that we have laid out for you in this article, and get plenty of patient practice you will soon master writing cursive letters!
View Comments
Its cool π ,that I use it to much but it helps a lotππβ
Thank goodness that this app still existβ¨ππβ€π I love it even YouTube is jealous
but its kinda unique thanks a lot "ST" its true you know ,but thanks for reading the comment...πβππβ¨πβ£ππ
This totally helped sooo much!!!!! I loved it! Thanks!!!!
I love science!
I don't understand the article , but I understand how to write the letters in cursive.
i love cursve i have been good and good and good and good
that same with me also
if you don't understand this you need to go back to 3rd grd
you are right he should
This helped a lot, I had cursive writing that no one can read from gr1-gr5. But when I found your site at the beginning of gr.6, my cursive got better. Tysm.
Hi, sir. Can I just inform you that i'm in fourth grade, 9 yrs old, coming onto this website to learn cursive writing? Please don't say things like that to people you don't know. It's better to just be kind, not rude. Remember that sometimes young kids can get onto this website, too. So be cautious next time.
This is easy for me because i am a kid my age is9
i'm 8 years old
i am 10
thanks for the help
how did you write that?
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this is hard for kids
no it's not
i agree
You really need to try to love it. When you want to learn something, put your mind and time into it
This is like a Breeze to easily if y'all can't do this than actually really try you are just glance and just say I can't do it study the lines and really really actually really really try
Hahaha!!! Only kids who actually put their time into learning can write cursive. Please don't say it's hard when it's actually not, and you just don't wanna try. Because it's not hard when you actually try.
THIS is hard for kids
It really, really is
I need to spell libra
are you just supposed to read they really don't teach you although I am a kid you should believe me.
Really? You sound like some idiot 45yr old pretending to be a kid on a game I play called
Roblox. It's where old guys usually go to lure little girls into giving their info.
Your G is wrong. Google images it and almost every result shows it differently.
BIG B
there are different fonts of cursive. google might use a different font
I used to never know how to write cursive but this helped me severely.
Didnt ask
yup
No one asked you to share your opinion either.
I was a police officer for 30 years, and 95 % of my writings were typed first on a type writer then on a computer. Anything I did write by hand was in block lettering. Recently I took a retirement job as a security, and all my reports are hand written. I got tired of writing block lettering plus it looks messy. I tried cursive and quickly realized that I didnβt know how to write in cursive. I googled cursive and found your site. I then practiced and practiced and now I write everything in cursive! Much nicer and faster. Thank you for you site.
what did you do i still can't write cursive sir.
i think you can and you can
π€¦π€¦π€¦π€¦
ππππ€£π€£πππ€£ππππππππππ€£π€£π€£π€£π€£π€£πππππ π π That's so funny.
so what
It helped a lot with my 8 kids
8 kids? Wow that must be hard.
I use this for spelling, for cursive
this is an awesome app. I use i all the time for my spelling homework when I forget a cursive letter.
me too u know its kinda lame and kinda helpful π€©π€βΊπΆπβ’
Agree with you
This helped.Thank you.