When you say handwrite, do you mean write in cursive? Because while I can recall threads in which persons have claimed to be unable to do the latter, I cannot remember anyone ever speaking of an utter inability to use pen/pencil and paper.
To the age issue: I’m 40, and I think writing in cursive is all but useless. The increase is speed is not balanced by the frequent reduction in legibility.
Oddly enough, this pertains to the topic. I recall a thread on the meaning of handwriting and was flummoxed at the number of people who were ready to kill and die for the idea that handwriting is different from printing and printing is not a type of handwriting.
Some people have a hard time following easy instructions(see post #76, for example). [Official Moderator Warning]Either people can stop rehashing old arguments, or I can hand out a fistful of Official Warnings and/or close this thread.[/Official Moderator Warning]
The meat one kind of surprised me, too - logically, you would think that people wouldn’t care how other people eat their meat, but for some reason we feel a strong need to judge other people (probably because we’re human ).
That one was a bit weird, though - the rare/blue steak eaters judged the medium/well done eaters, but the latter group didn’t seem to judge the former.
I’m honestly surprised almost everytime a Moderator steps in with a warning. One minute I’m scrolling through the posts, then boom, someone gets an official moderator warning.
Yeah, I mean cursive. Don’t know where I picked up the notion, but in my mind"handwriting" = cursive. I don’t recall the teachers using the word “cursive” until many years after I learned how to do it.
One thread’s responses that always bothered/surprised me was the discussion on pan-and-scan versus letterbox format for movies shown on TV (via videotape, etc). This was before wide-screen TVs were ubiquitous.
Someone was pitting the pan-and-scan technique that is used when a movie goes from wide-screen to a square TV format.
Pan-and-scan is where the whole camera shot doesn’t fit on the old CRT TV screens, so the scene pans back and forth between actors or whatever to show you everything that doesn’t fit. Essentially, the TV viewer isn’t seeing many (all?) scenes/shots as they appeared on the big screen in a theater. Some find the letterbox format quite delightful in solving the whole problem, except that some don’t like the black/unused spaced along the top and bottom of the screen.
Some posters would chime in to say that the didn’t like letterbox and they would admit that they didn’t care and weren’t bothered by the pan-and-scan, but the movie aficionados were upset, and seemed personally insulted that some posters has a disdain for letterbox!
Sorry to be a dolt, but I’m not sure I understand your question. If you’re making letters like the ones in the top half I’d say you were printing, the bottom, cursive. (Well, I apparently incorrectly refer to it as just writing or handwriting but you get the gist). I’m not sure what else there is, unless we’re getting into technicalities like calligraphy or hieroglyphics or something(?)