Opposite word for “cursive”, as related to writing
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Chapters
00:00 Opposite Word For “Cursive”, As Related To Writing
01:01 Accepted Answer Score 32
01:48 Answer 2 Score 4
02:40 Answer 3 Score 2
02:50 Answer 4 Score 1
03:35 Answer 5 Score 1
04:15 Thank you
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#singlewordrequests #etymology #antonyms #letterwriting #handwriting
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ACCEPTED ANSWER
Score 32
It is customary to speak of such writing as print or print writing among non-experts, and when the context is handwriting, it is understood that one is writing separated letters which resemble printed forms, not using a printing press or a typewriter to produce them.
Block writing or writing with block letters is also commonly found, though many would restrict this to capital letters. Many paper forms will include instructions like "print your name in in block letters" or "use block capitals for all fields".
The term printscript appears in Merriam-Webster and some academic sources, but I have never seen it otherwise.
I understand uncial to refer to a style of lettering, not a style of writing. I never heard it as as schoolchild, only as an adult learning calligraphy.
ANSWER 2
Score 4
In some official form you have to "sign" (in a completely free kind of cursive) and put your name as "printed name".
In Italian where for "Cursive" there is "Corsivo" the antonym for that is "Stampatello", that literally could be translated "printed like" while dictionaries report "block letters", "block capitals", "letter", "to write in block capitals or letters"; and in some official documents you have to sign "in modo leggibile" that means "in a readable way".
"Computer science" and typographically speaking a possible acceptation for "Cursive" in one of its etymological meaning of "running", it became "Italic" and their antonyms are "Normal", "Regular" and "Roman".
Typographically Italian "Stampatello" could be translated "Roman type".
There are alphabet like Arabic one that haven't a non-cursive form since they are themselves a cursive version of some other alphabets.
ANSWER 3
Score 2
Depending on the context, have you considered non-cursive?
ANSWER 4
Score 1
I use print-script, although "script" has ambiguous meanings internationally.
The insertion, "(without lifting the pen)" refers to the conventional cursive of the past ± 150 years. Certainly one could not claim that Spencerian is cursive with all its flourishes; it was written slowly, never running. In Italy, 600 years ago, men (perhaps women too) wrote the chancery hand cursively, adding some joins when it was comfortable for the hand to make them for what is known as cursive italic.
Historically, the "cursive" to which most now refer, came into being with imitation of copperplate engraving. The method allows for lines to be made without breaks. It is not a paper and pen method.
ANSWER 5
Score 1
If cursive has not inherited an unequivocal historic antonym in the past then it definitely needs one for the ever more discursive future. Why not apply the neologism cuneive derived from cuneiform 1670s, "wedge shaped," from French cunéiforme (16c.), from Latin cuneus "a wedge, wedge-shaped thing". Thus the opposite to cursive writing or running writing would then be cuneive writing or wedge-shaped lettering. As a writing style cuneive is one where letters are written separate from each other by space in a staccato (detached) like manner rather than in the legato (tied together) like manner written smoothly connected characteristic of the cursive writing style. In musical notation a wedge is used to indicate the more emphatic staccatissimo.