Can the Russian alphabet be written as it is printed?
According to what I have read on the internet, there are three ways for Russian letters to appear- printed, italic, and handwritten. But what I was wondering is, it it acceptable to write Russian letters as they are printed?- You know, like English manuscript form. I can read Russian, and, up til now, have been writing Russian the way it appears on the internet (in printed form). But if I were to write a note to a native Russian speaker in printed Russian, would he understand it? And, more importantly, would it be correct? Thanks!
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Tagged with: english manuscript • native russian speaker • printed form • russian letters • three ways
Filed under: Russian - Written and Spoken
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there are 2 ways actually, handwritten (cursive) and printed, italic is printed font that looks like cursive
yes, it’s correct to write as printed, and in most cases it would be easier to understand for reader then cursive text. most people write in cursive because it allows to write much faster.