Cursive cursive writing

Chinese six-body script is a calligraphy font that appeared after oracle bone inscriptions, bronze inscriptions, and official script. The characteristic is that the strokes are connected and the writing speed is fast.

Cursive script is a calligraphy style created for the convenience of writing. "Shuowen Jiezi" says: "There was cursive script in the Han Dynasty." Cursive script began in the early Han Dynasty. Its characteristics are: keeping the outline of characters, destroying the rules of officialdom, letting people run around, and rushing to work. Because of the meaning of cursive creation, it is called cursive script.

The provinces and changes in Zhangcao's strokes have rules and regulations to follow. Representative works such as the Songjiang version of Wu Huangxiang's "Jijiuzhang" of the Three Kingdoms. Jincao's writing style is informal and smooth, and his representative works include "Chu Yue" and "De Shi Tie" written by Wang Xizhi of the Jin Dynasty. Kuangcao appeared in the Tang Dynasty, represented by Zhang Xu and Huaisu, with wild and uninhibited writing styles, and became an artistic creation that was completely divorced from practicality. From then on, cursive script was just a calligraphy work that calligraphers copied from Zhangcao, Jincao and Kuangcao. Kuang Cao's representative works include "Belly Pain" by Zhang Xu of the Tang Dynasty and "Autobiography" by Huai Su.