Fun fact: even though only a hand full of Germans can read this script, it is officially accredited by the authorities. So if you submit, for ex., an application or a criminal complaint written in this script, they are legally obligated to decipher it.
Thank you very much for your respect for Gothic handwriting. It has a very short history by Eastern standards, and, of course, has a huge number of letterforms. A small note - D (large and small) writing in the opposite direction, s (small) has a long stem (like h small), your variant is usually used in ligatures such as "st". Umlaut appeared later, earlier they wrote the vowel + e (after or over).
This is Sütterlinschrift. My grandparents wrote in this script. The Nazis had forbidden this in 1942. Before this year, all students wrote it in schools.
@@MrMoritz74The Nazis banned Black-letter Fraktur in most printed books. Supposedly these idiots claimed it was a Jewish invention, a Judenschrift. Morons.
This is no language, only letters. To write with this in english is without any problems possible. A-Z, Ä, Ö, Ü, ß are the Letters. The problem is that it is hard to read
For all those not knowing this my grandma used this writing. Without this knowledge any german letter or handwriting from the past of some time period is unreadable to nowadays reader. 👍
Marcas de Barún Most guides I‘ve seen only show a simplified version for little kids, just like Sütterlin. The best examples of gaelic handwriting are from pre-1950s letters. By the way, do you speek Gaelic?
@@valentingartner3793 You're right, I've a few old postcards from distant relatives that have some lovely examples of Gaelic script. To answer your question, I do and I also study it, although I'm not fluent (yet).
@@marcasdebarun6879 That‘s respectable. I‘ve been trying to learn Gaelic for years now, but there isn’t a lot of learning material or courses for german speakers. Any suggestion on how to approach the language? Also: Did your relatives write the “a“ starting at the middle or the base line?
Thank you very much for giving this to the World. Sütterlin is almost forgotten, wich is a shame. Lots of literature is written in these letters and rots on attics. I have aot of letters fom my great grandfather. Letters from Tzingtau in China and some from ww1 wich is either written in Sütterlin or Kurrent.
D and d should be written from left to right, the long s goes all the way to the top and bottom, and the round s is missing. Your control and fluency is so impressive!
@@WhenDoesTheVideoActuallyStart the cursive I learned in California is different to the one my students use here in Spain. It's not crazily different, but several times a class session a student will ask me: is that a [letter]?
@@kikimdo I wasn't disagreeing with you, just saying that this specific script is a radical example because it's an attempt at using a modern pen to emulate a german form of stylized quill calligraphy.
Some of these script fonts you chose have not actually been used since the early 1900s and been replaced with less strict font styles dating back to the 1930s
I saw a few times some old German Cursuve writing, but was confused by some letters (for example, the letters H and F) that nowadays look like other letters nice!!
@@thegermanguy6129 sei dankbar dass du es lernen *darfst* Ich habs mir selber beibringen müssen weil ich das Kriegstagebuch meines Urgroßvaters lesen wollte.
Some of those lines at the beginning and end of a letter only make sense if they are written in a word…so you instantly know how to write it as complete words without thinking about how to connect them the right way
Good luck finding anyone under the age of 90 and not studying history to be able to read your handwriting then. It shire is nice to write like that tho.
Klemens Kilic made a good tutorial on Kurrent. It is on UA-cam. If you are interested in German script also try Fraktur which I made several videos on.
I learned how to read and write this so I could read my great grandparents wedding- and birth certificates. It also came in handy when visiting museums. Unfortunately it seems like people used to like tilting their writing almost 60° to the right. It's madness.
As good and exotic as this form of cursive may seem, I understand why it went out of style. Most letters don't even look remotely similar to their block counterparts, thus making them unintelligible to most readers.
Amazing. Some of the letters are so exaggerated that it's impractical and looks incomplete compared to the current cursive. The U, v, and w look so insane. Theres a few that havent changed like the lower case b and both L's.
Sütterlin hatten wir bis in den 70 er jahren noch als Unterrichtsstoff. Wurde noch mit Federkiel geschrieben. Dazu gebrauchte man noch das Tintenfass .
Bin ich froh dass ich schon mit Kugelschreiber schreiben durfte. Mit Tinte als Linkshänder schreiben, da sieht die Hand und das Heft hinterher immer aus als wäre man ein Kind was noch nicht mit stiften umgehen kann 😂
yes, that's Süttelin, but I believe the "s" should reach as high as the "f" or "h" , and there is another "s", when it is written at the End of a Word. Also, I don't think any Books are written in it @Trollvolk, it is cursive Writing, it was supposedly invented to facilitate writing with Steel Nibs. But it is true, I have a Bunch of Letters and Postcards, which I cannot read, because of course Handwriting differs a Lot from what we have seen here.
Well, it looks nice but you're definitely writing some letters the wrong way, starting at the end of a letter against the common writing direction. And, to be honest, it's not Sütterlin at all.
This guy's writing: *fancy loops and curves*
My writing: *random scribbles that'll make a doctor confused*
Doctor: Are you challenging me?
Slavs the use the Cyrillic Alphabet: *Understandable have a great day*
@@hasanmuhammad6651 là em đã biết nữa
@@vanphuctran2125 Didn't expect a fellow Vietnamese here
Your small "e" is actually an "n" the way you drew it.
Fun fact: even though only a hand full of Germans can read this script, it is officially accredited by the authorities. So if you submit, for ex., an application or a criminal complaint written in this script, they are legally obligated to decipher it.
bruh
Only a handfull? I learned this script at school!
Only a handful! That's just as much of a fact as it is fun.
Thank you very much for your respect for Gothic handwriting. It has a very short history by Eastern standards, and, of course, has a huge number of letterforms. A small note - D (large and small) writing in the opposite direction, s (small) has a long stem (like h small), your variant is usually used in ligatures such as "st". Umlaut appeared later, earlier they wrote the vowel + e (after or over).
Never thought watching somebody write in a language I don't even know would be so entertaining
agreed 1000%
This is Sütterlinschrift. My grandparents wrote in this script. The Nazis had forbidden this in 1942. Before this year, all students wrote it in schools.
@@MrMoritz74The Nazis banned Black-letter Fraktur in most printed books. Supposedly these idiots claimed it was a Jewish invention, a Judenschrift. Morons.
This is no language, only letters. To write with this in english is without any problems possible. A-Z, Ä, Ö, Ü, ß are the Letters. The problem is that it is hard to read
For all those not knowing this my grandma used this writing. Without this knowledge any german letter or handwriting from the past of some time period is unreadable to nowadays reader. 👍
Fascinating seeing just how drastically different the letters are from what I know.
Also you should do the old Gaelic typeface next (Cló Gaelach).
I hope he get‘s it right. Only a hand full of people know gaelic cursive
@@valentingartner3793 True, although I would even be happy with a vid on just printed letters. There are guides out there though.
Marcas de Barún Most guides I‘ve seen only show a simplified version for little kids, just like Sütterlin. The best examples of gaelic handwriting are from pre-1950s letters. By the way, do you speek Gaelic?
@@valentingartner3793 You're right, I've a few old postcards from distant relatives that have some lovely examples of Gaelic script. To answer your question, I do and I also study it, although I'm not fluent (yet).
@@marcasdebarun6879 That‘s respectable. I‘ve been trying to learn Gaelic for years now, but there isn’t a lot of learning material or courses for german speakers. Any suggestion on how to approach the language?
Also: Did your relatives write the “a“ starting at the middle or the base line?
Thank you very much for giving this to the World. Sütterlin is almost forgotten, wich is a shame. Lots of literature is written in these letters and rots on attics. I have aot of letters fom my great grandfather. Letters from Tzingtau in China and some from ww1 wich is either written in Sütterlin or Kurrent.
My mother wrote like this as a child..... it's lovely.
1:04 「も」
D and d should be written from left to right, the long s goes all the way to the top and bottom, and the round s is missing. Your control and fluency is so impressive!
Long S and ß (+ä ü ö) are not too nesecarry for English anyway 😅
It's interesting to see how different cursive can me across the languages that use latin script.
This is just stylized to hell and back.
@@WhenDoesTheVideoActuallyStart the cursive I learned in California is different to the one my students use here in Spain. It's not crazily different, but several times a class session a student will ask me: is that a [letter]?
@@kikimdo I wasn't disagreeing with you, just saying that this specific script is a radical example because it's an attempt at using a modern pen to emulate a german form of stylized quill calligraphy.
It‘s Not Latin, it‘s gothic
Some of these script fonts you chose have not actually been used since the early 1900s and been replaced with less strict font styles dating back to the 1930s
I saw a few times some old German Cursuve writing, but was confused by some letters (for example, the letters H and F) that nowadays look like other letters
nice!!
0:57 Wrong - this should start from the bottom. It’s cursive script and the letters are joined to the bottom left stroke of this letter...
Thanks mate, now I miss my grandma.
もう本当に彼が世界進出をしようとするようだ。
This is called “Sütterlin” anti it’s based on another script called “Kurrent”
This is the old German cursive. The new German cursive is less complicated than this one. But it's different from the English cursive.
this is awesome, i'd love to see one for polish cursive someday!
Never knew this was a thing :O
What is polish cursive? Isnt that just normal?
As a German who never learned this, because it's too old duh, I am fairly confused 😂
That's weird, im 20 and learned it in school!
Wir müssen es jetzt wieder in der schule lernen
@@thegermanguy6129 sei dankbar dass du es lernen *darfst* Ich habs mir selber beibringen müssen weil ich das Kriegstagebuch meines Urgroßvaters lesen wollte.
Hey Takumi, can you do some phrases in German Cursive? :)
I taught this myself when I was 11 sth years old and incorporated sone letters to my handwriting…my teacher were pretty confused 😅 loved it
Some of those lines at the beginning and end of a letter only make sense if they are written in a word…so you instantly know how to write it as complete words without thinking about how to connect them the right way
実際に文を書いたときにその書き順で良いかな?ってのはありましたが、辞書の巻末にある例とそっくりの形できれいですね✨
I'm so glad that Sütterlin isn't dying out on the internet, it's so beautiful but so rarely used
Just to clarify, That's Kurrent, not Sütterlin. Sütterlin and Kurrent get mixed up often as Sütterlin is a rare variant off of the Kurrent form.
@@RavenFlight413 You're right, I think the difference is that Kurrent is slanted and Sütterlin is straight, right?
German doctor: (writes a prescription)
Patient: ¿Why do I hear the boss music?
ドイツ人です🇩🇪約150年前に使われた筆記体の非常に良い例です!因みにですが、dの書き順?向き?は逆ですね。下から書き始めるのです。いつもの素晴らしい動画をこれからも頑張ってください!
I love how whatever part of europe you might be in,
your Os look the same
結構昔の筆記体ですね。(大学でドイツ語を履修していた者です)
Wonderful writing!
古い書き方だけど、綺麗です。
ドイツ語ってなんかカッコいいイメージない????
Awesome thanks 😍
Nihongo to Espanol to German
This IS a miracle to see
Deutsche****
I live in germany and wanna write like this
Good luck finding anyone under the age of 90 and not studying history to be able to read your handwriting then. It shire is nice to write like that tho.
@@vicpon3014 hahaha yezz
@@starkinndread as a kid I used to write in Sütterlin for fun. My teachers hated me when I adapted some of those in my regular handwriting XD
Klemens Kilic made a good tutorial on Kurrent. It is on UA-cam. If you are interested in German script also try Fraktur which I made several videos on.
Look for the“Bund für deutsche Schrift“, they distribute learning materials and educate people about this script.
Wow nice! So different than American cursive
This is really fancy.
That's great! 😍😍😍
今日一日で3ヵ国語見れたので、世界旅行した気分になりました。
で?こんなので満足してるとか貧乏人かよwwwだっせぇなぁwww哀れ
@@ねるねるA 。
@@ねるねるA
なんし来たん?
土足禁止や、汚え足跡付けんなちゃ。
I learned how to read and write this so I could read my great grandparents wedding- and birth certificates. It also came in handy when visiting museums. Unfortunately it seems like people used to like tilting their writing almost 60° to the right. It's madness.
ドイツ語習ったとき、筆記体も少し練習したけどもっと英語っぽい字だったような。もっと古い時代の筆記体なのかな。
The P is wrong, ſ and ß are to short and the s is missing. Also, ch, ck and tz form separate letters in this script.
Some of these letters we write the same way here in Brazil
5:00 hmm ok that looks cool
5:05 AAAAAAAAAHHHG!!
What pens do you use?
Muito bom, conhecer outros tipos de alfabeto👏. 👍🇧🇷
wow... nice 💕
30年前に、この書体でドイツ語の先生に年賀状を書いたら、驚いていました。
先生は、お母様はこの書体で書いているので読めるけど、書けないから。
Once my grandpa teached me how to write it, but I guess 90% of Germans are not able to read it nowadays.
I can only read Sütterlin but my great grandmother knew how to write it. She survived two world wars.
Thanks for keeping it alive. 👍
As good and exotic as this form of cursive may seem, I understand why it went out of style. Most letters don't even look remotely similar to their block counterparts, thus making them unintelligible to most readers.
This is completely different from how we write in Brazil.
So nice. 😍
Yes finally the German kursive
What kind/brand pen are you using? The ink is so clean and uniform!
It says at the beginning of the video: zebra sarasa clip (1.0mm)
Sütterlin
Sadly missing the ending s
... and ch, ck, st, tz etc. ;)
ローマ字で書くのと同じ感じでドイツ語とかの筆記体も使えるのかな?
どうだろ、ドイツ語は分からないけど。
ロシア語とかギリシャ語だと「P」を「ロー」って読んでローマ字変換すると「R」だから意味が違う字があるかも。
ドイツも特有な文字あるし例えば「S」って読む「ß」とか。
@@25SLAmo We use both ß and s
*Muchísimas Gracias* 📖 🙌
I am Chine and this is my everyday writing font.
My dad trained me to write in sütterlin...
He still uses it today...
Cursirver than the Cirilic, Greek and any other script lol, but still beautiful tho.
Amazing. Some of the letters are so exaggerated that it's impractical and looks incomplete compared to the current cursive. The U, v, and w look so insane. Theres a few that havent changed like the lower case b and both L's.
最近外国の文字書きすぎな件
黙れよ。てめぇの意見なんか誰も聞いてねぇんだわ
勉強になりますよね!
My writing: *Modern*
My friend's handwriting (Diana): *This*
ADORÁVEL
こんにちはたくみ!すききみの手書きが。
たくみん「この調子で世界征服しよ」
先生、ベトナム語のアルファベットお願いします🙏
ch の綴り字も見てみたかったです。ダイナミックな形です。
Beautiful, but completely confusing. Looks tedious lol
Why does this handwriting style smell like a doctor’s office
Sütterlin hatten wir bis in den 70 er jahren noch als Unterrichtsstoff. Wurde noch mit Federkiel geschrieben. Dazu gebrauchte man noch das Tintenfass .
Bin ich froh dass ich schon mit Kugelschreiber schreiben durfte. Mit Tinte als Linkshänder schreiben, da sieht die Hand und das Heft hinterher immer aus als wäre man ein Kind was noch nicht mit stiften umgehen kann 😂
They changed the cursive german letters
Old one is 35 years ago
yes, that's Süttelin, but I believe the "s" should reach as high as the "f" or "h" , and there is another "s", when it is written at the End of a Word. Also, I don't think any Books are written in it @Trollvolk, it is cursive Writing, it was supposedly invented to facilitate writing with Steel Nibs. But it is true, I have a Bunch of Letters and Postcards, which I cannot read, because of course Handwriting differs a Lot from what we have seen here.
Legal! Já dei o gostei!
Nicely done. The "D" and "d" written backwards is a bit irritating though. :)
Fルーズベルトが書いていたサインに似てるな。Dのところがそうだった
Is it for real ?!
Can you show how to write the gothic shrift?
Наши русские буквы попроще этих закорючек, пожалуй.
Almost looks like Sütterlin
now I know he’s in Brazil because of the bike he passed
Lieben Dank 🤗 🙌
спасибо )
今日の書道家たくみの1日 1イタリア語を書く 2ポルトガル語を書く 3 ドイツ語を書く
2次元アイコンの分際でコメントすんなや気持ち悪い。普通に不愉快なんで私への嫌がらせで報告しました。貴方のせいで気分が悪いんですよ。どうしてくれるんですかねえぇ?あ?
That is messed up...
Теперь я понял, какое письмо используют врачи. ))
Sütterlin or Kurrentschrift?
ドイツ語の伝統的な文字を尊んでありがとうございます。Googleはタイトルを自動的に翻訳してしまうので、それはGoogleの間違いかどうかわかりませんが、その文字は「Sütterlin」じゃなくて、「Kurrent」と言われます。P.S. やっぱりGoogleの自動翻訳の間違いでした。
All writing as L & O or L version
New to me! 🙂
En la primaria, me enseñaron escribir en cursiva, y no se tiene que despegar el bolígrafo, al escribir las palabras (y por ende, las letras) 😑
I think you forgot the distinction between short and long s
Woah, I don't even recognize this cursive writing and I grew up in Austria (German-speaking country)
Na dann lerns und dann kannst du alles was vor 1945 geschrieben wurde lesen
@@Oberkommando **Click**
Noice
@@EPSON-HP hä was?
@@Oberkommando It's sad that you don't know the meme...
ウムラウトが付いているやつ、顔みたいで可愛いなぁ。
あの〜突然ですがすとぷりの歌詞動画作ってるんですけど見てくれua-cam.com/video/rECgT1iSUyY/v-deo.html
I can write like that, too. It's called Sütterlin, but mine looks a bit different, it's not quite as fancy with all the loops.
Podrías hacer el alfabeto alemán, por favor sensei
Well, it looks nice but you're definitely writing some letters the wrong way, starting at the end of a letter against the common writing direction. And, to be honest, it's not Sütterlin at all.
❤️❤️
What language is this?