A-Z letter chart

Cursive Alphabet

Explore uppercase and lowercase cursive letters from A to Z. Click a letter to see multiple cursive variants, copy the character, or use the chart as a reference before making practice worksheets.

Cursive alphabet A-Z

26 letters

How cursive letters work

Cursive letters are designed to move smoothly from one stroke to the next. Lowercase letters often share entry strokes, exit strokes, loops, and humps so they can connect inside words. Uppercase letters are usually more decorative and often stand at the beginning of names, sentences, signatures, or headings.

Uppercase vs lowercase cursive

Lowercase cursive is the foundation of fluent handwriting because those letters appear most often and connect repeatedly. Uppercase cursive is more varied across handwriting systems, so students should learn one readable form first before adding extra flourishes.

Practice with worksheets

After studying individual letters, move into short words and names. The best practice sequence is letter shape, letter pair, word, then sentence. Use the cursive worksheet generator to create printable lines for the letters that need the most repetition.

Cursive Alphabet FAQ

What is the cursive alphabet?

The cursive alphabet is the set of uppercase and lowercase letters written in connected handwriting forms.

Can I copy cursive letters from this chart?

Yes. Select any letter and copy one of the cursive Unicode variants from the preview panel.

Are uppercase and lowercase cursive letters different?

Yes. Uppercase cursive letters are usually larger and more decorative, while lowercase letters are designed for smooth connections inside words.

How should beginners practice cursive letters?

Start with lowercase letters that share similar strokes, then practice uppercase letters and short connected words.