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vanderZwan 5 hours ago

Huh, I just indirectly learned from this article that the way I write a lower-case "t" in cursive is a Dutch way of doing so (edit: sollniss' comment implies it was a common style in Germany too). A quick search suggests it has been replaced with an English style of "t" in the last decades too.

I wonder if that makes my handwriting harder to read for anyone who isn't Dutch and over 40 years old.

Anyway, just bringing it up because you don't need to lift up your pen to write that kind of "t".

Search for "koordschrift" on https://primarium.info/countries/the-netherlands/ to find the illustration showing how I was taught to write it in the late 80s. It's the letter vaguely shaped like a pine tree.

aitchnyu 4 hours ago | parent [-]

Also the x thing is common knowledge in India, and maybe most countries with Independence days. I switched to backtrack though.

seszett 3 hours ago | parent [-]

I've learned to write x the way this post says (two mirrored c's) but I don't understand what you mean by "independence days". We don't have one in France anyway.

stalinlover1312 3 hours ago | parent [-]

"Countries with independence days" aka former colonies.

seszett 2 hours ago | parent [-]

Well I understood that much, but I'm not sure what link it could have with the shape of the x, especially since the English don't do it the same way as India.