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Quikscript
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==Description== [[Image:Quickscript alphabet revised names.png|thumb|right|240px|Alphabet chart with names for all letters and ligatures]] Each Quikscript letter represents a single English [[phoneme]]. There are 25 consonants and 15 vowels, making 40 letters in all. The letters are designed to be written easily, each requiring only one (usually curved) pen stroke. Just as in the [[Latin alphabet|Roman alphabet]], there are short letters (e.g. a, c, e, m, and n), written between the base writing line and the "upper parallel" (as Read calls it), tall letters (e.g. b, d, f, k, and t), which ascend above the top of the short letters, and deep letters (e.g. g, j, p and y), which descend below the base writing line. Quikscript, however, makes better use of these possibilities with 11 tall, 11 deep, and 18 short letters. All vowels have short letter shapes, and the most common phonemes have the simplest letter shapes. Similar-sounding phonemes have similar letter shapes, for example: * [[Vowel length|Long vowels]] and [[Semivowel|glides]] are written with a larger bend or loop, while short vowels have a simpler shape. * Every [[Voice (phonetics)|voiced consonant]] is written with a deep letter similar in shape to the corresponding voiceless consonant which is written with a tall letter. While the Roman alphabet has two distinct [[Letterform|forms]] for each letter, designated [[Letter case#Terminology|minuscule and majuscule]], most letters in Quikscript have only one form. Names and proper nouns are preceded with a mid-line "name-dot" (Β·) which is sufficient to distinguish them from ordinary words. ===Junior Quikscript=== Beginners learn Junior Quikscript first, which is much more similar to the [[Shavian alphabet]]. Each word is spelled "as it is spoken". Each letter is written separately from the next so that it is equivalent to what is termed "printing" in the Roman alphabet. Some people may prefer Junior Quikscript for printed texts as readers are used to the Roman alphabet being printed in that manner. ==== Examples ==== <gallery> File:Junior Quikscript example passage from 'Little Bo Peep'.png|Junior Quikscript example passage from 'Little Bo Peep' File:Junior Quikscript example passage from 'Little Jack Horner'.png|Junior Quikscript example passage from 'Little Jack Horner' File:Junior Quikscript example passage from 'Ride a cock horse to Banbury Cross'.png|Junior Quikscript example passage from 'Ride a cock horse to Banbury Cross' File:Junior Quikscript example passage from 'Mary Had a Little Lamb'.png|Junior Quikscript example passage from 'Mary Had a Little Lamb' </gallery> === Senior Quikscript === Senior Quikscript introduces a number of advanced techniques which save time in writing, namely ligatures, cursive, alternate letter forms, abbreviations and half-letters. ==== Ligatures and cursive ==== The most obvious difference is that Senior encourages [[Ligature (writing)|ligatures]] as long as the shapes of the letters are not altered. The design of the alphabet fosters these natural connections, as each Quikscript letter either begins or ends on the base line or the upper parallel. This structure permits letters to connect easily yet maintains the shapes of the individual letters because there are no connecting strokes between letters as there are in cursive Roman alphabet writing. It is common that Senior writing will have several conjoined letters in a row, but when such a connection is not possible, the letters are simply left unconnected. ==== Alternate letter forms and abbreviations ==== Read added a very small number of alternative letter forms, which permit even more letters to connect easily, along with a number of abbreviations for the most common English words, further reducing the space requirement for printed material and hence the costs of physical publication; it is the writer's choice whether to use them or not. ==== Half-letters ==== Senior Quikscript also introduces the concept of half-letters. Read recognized that the top half of several tall letters and the bottom half of several deep letters are sufficient to clearly distinguish them. Therefore, the portion of the vertical shafts of those letters which lies between the base line and upper parallel can be discarded with no effect to legibility. Half-letters increase the number of letters which can be conjoined, yielding several benefits: # The alphabet's appearance becomes more cursive and fluid, which is [[Aesthetics|aesthetically]] appealing. # Handwriting is more efficient because fewer pen-lifts are required. # Word-shapes are more variable and distinct, which improves [[word recognition]] and increases the average [[Reading#Reading rate|reading speed]]. ==== Examples ==== <gallery> File:Senior Quikscript example 'Rip van Winkle'.png|Senior Quikscript example passage from 'Rip van Winkle' File:Senior Quikscript From J. A. Froude and R. L. Stevenson.png|Senior Quikscript example passage from 'J. A. Froude and R. L. Stevenson' File:Senior Quikscript example passages.png|Senior Quikscript example passages </gallery>
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