It's very neat, and you've got all the shapes right, so well done! But it's also so neat that it's: a) probably impossible to write faster than a snail, and b) impossible to tell if you've drawn the shapes the right way.
What do I mean by this? In Russian handwriting (as in English, tbh), the order of the lines for each letter matters. A lot of my students, for example, begin the Я in the bottom right corner (which is totally insane). If you'd written faster (which you will have to do, once you start creating longer sentences), it might have revealed to us if you were drawing the letters the right way.
You might think learning the handwriting is a waste of time, but it is simply how 99% of Russians write. If you only have an interest in using these blocky print letters, you might as well type everything. I would use this website to get a sense of how to write the letters.
Yes, that's totally correct. Those Дд and Лл look non-native tho, people in Russia almost never write them in this style by hand. You can get some reference here for example.
Honestly I just colored it in a way by which ones look similar and which ones different… For sure makes no sense but it kinda helps me remember the letters more🫠
Because it's wayyyy more easier to write them like this we in Bulgaria also write them like this and when handwriting in class/lecture it's faster to write them like that than writing д
Hello! Actually we don't use this way of writing, you know russian cursive that what we use. Your Л doesn't look natural, you need to write it like /\ . I recommend you to try a "прописи" for elementary school students. It's pretty simple for learning how to write russian cursive like step by step. It describes literally every single line and part of a letter Good luck!
You will not be persecuted: Today there are prejudices about Russia, tomorrow there will be prejudices about America. Does that mean you don't need to learn English? Nonsense! Do what you think you need to do and what you like =)
Your handwriting is very beautiful! I'll be honest: In Russia, only 1% have such beautiful handwriting, the most common is the handwriting that is hard to read!
there's not much use in drilling block letters, as it's unlikely you'll ever need to handwrite them. Russian handwriting is done in cursive, which has some differences from block letters. you will likely find that cursive letters are easier to write as they are meant to be handwritten, unlike block letters
grammar does not have a capital ь/ъ. there is not a single real word that began with these letters (unlike ы, for example). just because the letter is big, it doesn't always become capital
i'll be that person again: digital fonts aren't representative of how russians actually write blocky letters by hand (when they do, anyway - most people just write in cursive most of the time). that weird squiggly б, for example, is exclusive for print fonts, habdwritten small б just looks like a tiny Б. Л and Д are normally written with a simple A-frame angle instead of that blocky curvy shape. other than that, you've got all the shapes and names just right!
Start with a lower circle at 1 o"clock and continue counter clockwise full circle, and then till 11 o'clock. From there draw the upper part somehow. Should work.
З as a letter is pronounce "ze", withiut "d". Legs of Д go beyond the line like Щ и Ц. It's not a cursive and if we write, we use cursive unless documents require block letters. Ь is "myagkiy znak", not "myagkee" (and pronounced as "myahkiy".
Д to Л is like Щ to Ш, both tails go under the baseline. Also when we write Д and Л as block letters, we make them triangular like Λ. Lowercase ф goes below the baseline like р. Usually lowercase з if written in blocks still keeps the lower tail under the baseline. Also lowercase д may be written in its block-variant as д or g. Lowercase т can also be written as m, although rare in non-cursive fonts. Look at historical typefonts, there are a lot of variations of some letters
It's very neat, and you've got all the shapes right, so well done! But it's also so neat that it's: a) probably impossible to write faster than a snail, and b) impossible to tell if you've drawn the shapes the right way.
What do I mean by this? In Russian handwriting (as in English, tbh), the order of the lines for each letter matters. A lot of my students, for example, begin the Я in the bottom right corner (which is totally insane). If you'd written faster (which you will have to do, once you start creating longer sentences), it might have revealed to us if you were drawing the letters the right way.
You might think learning the handwriting is a waste of time, but it is simply how 99% of Russians write. If you only have an interest in using these blocky print letters, you might as well type everything. I would use this website to get a sense of how to write the letters.
https://www.russianlessons.net/lessons/russian_handwriting.php
Yes, that's totally correct. Those Дд and Лл look non-native tho, people in Russia almost never write them in this style by hand. You can get some reference here for example.
Also I can't figure the coloring)
Honestly I just colored it in a way by which ones look similar and which ones different… For sure makes no sense but it kinda helps me remember the letters more🫠
Why does Д become D and д become g though??
Because it's wayyyy more easier to write them like this we in Bulgaria also write them like this and when handwriting in class/lecture it's faster to write them like that than writing д
[deleted]
Looks very good to me
The "legs" on Д drop below the line, just like the tails on Ц and Щ.
No. It’s not in cursive.
https://preview.redd.it/lav6wggjxjcg1.jpeg?width=1130&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=4633f4c6efb361eb6c92a29c710c7974c96a28f4
Hello! Actually we don't use this way of writing, you know russian cursive that what we use. Your Л doesn't look natural, you need to write it like /\ . I recommend you to try a "прописи" for elementary school students. It's pretty simple for learning how to write russian cursive like step by step. It describes literally every single line and part of a letter Good luck!
better learn cursive
We don't write letters so, it's not hand writing form of letters
You will not be persecuted: Today there are prejudices about Russia, tomorrow there will be prejudices about America. Does that mean you don't need to learn English? Nonsense! Do what you think you need to do and what you like =)
Your handwriting is very beautiful! I'll be honest: In Russia, only 1% have such beautiful handwriting, the most common is the handwriting that is hard to read!
there's not much use in drilling block letters, as it's unlikely you'll ever need to handwrite them. Russian handwriting is done in cursive, which has some differences from block letters. you will likely find that cursive letters are easier to write as they are meant to be handwritten, unlike block letters
but your block letters look just fine :)
Дд's legs under the line, like Щщ/Цц's
Russian grammar doesn't have capital ъ/ь (uppercase and capital are not the same things)
most often native speakers write Лл and upper part of Дд triangular
Still we have to somehow write them all caps, for example in headers
how big should this part be for you to notice it?
grammar does not have a capital ь/ъ. there is not a single real word that began with these letters (unlike ы, for example). just because the letter is big, it doesn't always become capital
Да вроде
Учись прописные писать
i'll be that person again: digital fonts aren't representative of how russians actually write blocky letters by hand (when they do, anyway - most people just write in cursive most of the time). that weird squiggly б, for example, is exclusive for print fonts, habdwritten small б just looks like a tiny Б. Л and Д are normally written with a simple A-frame angle instead of that blocky curvy shape. other than that, you've got all the shapes and names just right!
ur б looks like 6
That’s exactly my problem, no matter how many times I write it it looks like 6😭
Start with a lower circle at 1 o"clock and continue counter clockwise full circle, and then till 11 o'clock. From there draw the upper part somehow. Should work.
Hard and soft signs are never capitalized.
We never write Лл this way. It is always looks like a pointy angle upside down
"Legs" of Дд should ne under the line, like tails of Ц and Щ.
Yeah, write ОБЪЯВЛЕНИЕ then without capitalizing them
Its clean and nice. Though I promis you wont be writing like that. It'll take way too much time.
Write a more convient style. The Д and Г always give me trouble but dont let anyone fool you.... the only time it looks good is in cursive.
Now thats the way to go! 😆
Honestly that looks really good!!
Yes, it's beautiful, but almost no one older than 5 writes this way. We write in cursive.
Didn’t know that, sorry. I’m working on rewriting this in cursive now, thank you
З as a letter is pronounce "ze", withiut "d". Legs of Д go beyond the line like Щ и Ц. It's not a cursive and if we write, we use cursive unless documents require block letters. Ь is "myagkiy znak", not "myagkee" (and pronounced as "myahkiy".
Fixing it rn, also I’m writing all of these in cursive bcs I wanted to have both versions written
Well, on your photos I see only block letters.
Sorry, I didn’t explain it well. I meant that I rewrote(?) them like a few minutes ago and thank you for the tips
Д’s “legs” should hang below the baseline, not standing on it
Yes, it looks perfect. You should at least understand the cursive as well, so you could add it there
Д to Л is like Щ to Ш, both tails go under the baseline. Also when we write Д and Л as block letters, we make them triangular like Λ. Lowercase ф goes below the baseline like р. Usually lowercase з if written in blocks still keeps the lower tail under the baseline. Also lowercase д may be written in its block-variant as д or g. Lowercase т can also be written as m, although rare in non-cursive fonts. Look at historical typefonts, there are a lot of variations of some letters