people have different handwriting the same way they have different faces, hair, hair color, weight, height, and everything else that we have different. there's not really a scientific fact that can say exactly why we all have different handwriting; it's just that people have different personalities--quieter people may like to write neater, while wilder people would more likely have sloppy handwriting. it all depends on the person. if i was wild and i wanted to have neat handwriting, then i could. if a quiet person was in a hurry, he/she would write sloppily. it all depends.
2006-08-29 12:55:26
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Because handwriting is reflective of a person's thought processes. Particularly unique people have particularly unique handwriting. Read a book on Graphology or Handwriting Analysis sometime; it's really interesting stuff.
2006-08-29 13:47:51
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answer #2
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answered by traveller 3
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Maybe it has something to do with what emotions we were having when we were learning each letter, if each part of the brain has to do with a particular emotion . ..then when we write the letters and how they are written correlate to how we are feeling at that moment or the moment when we learned the letters. .or even when we learned them or wrote them in a past life. Maybe it has to do with each letter being represented by a particular star in the sky, and how those stars are affecting us determines what our handwriting look like. If we are not so influenced by environment, maybe it has something to do with who taught us the alphabet, what their emotions were etc. Or, how strong or weak muscles are at any given moment. For people whose handwriting stays the same all the time (if that happens) maybe they have memorized a particular way to make letters and just recreate in the same way based on memory
2006-08-29 12:58:12
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Because people let their personalities show up in their handwriting. Besides, what fun would the world be if everyone wrote the exact same way?
2006-08-29 14:09:07
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answer #4
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answered by lovergirl 3
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Because all our hands are shaped differently and it depends also upon how we first began to write letters. Personality was coming out in our handwriting before we knew it. Big, round letters might reflect openness, friendliness, or carelessness. Tight, small letters might be someone introverted, afraid to take chances. Little loops might mean someone wants extra attention. Impatience might result in half finished or missing letters. Very perfectly written lettering may say a child is afraid of authority or does not want to take a chance in balking authority or they could just be very conscientious!
2006-08-29 12:54:08
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answer #5
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answered by Sunnidaze 3
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There are many reasons. I write strangely because I learned to hold my pen wrong. I noticed that people write like those who teach them. My handwriting is a combination of my parent's and my kindergarten teacher's. It also gets strange looking when I'm in a hurry.
2006-08-29 12:53:22
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answer #6
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answered by Steph 4
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I don't believe our handwriting is unique, probably only few people possessed unique hand signiture but for the common people, I believe we have the same technique on how to draw letters and objects. It is really hard to imagine that my ABCs writing is totally unique. I am guessing, one of my neighbors write the same as I am with few variations, probably.
2006-08-29 13:16:12
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answer #7
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answered by Alexander C 2
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human beings have distinctive handwriting. Its the comparable element as human beings are distinctive, they seem distinctive, they act distinctive and all. Our handwriting reflects who we are and our character. some human beings, the situation of their palms while they write is distinctive. those factors additionally make a contribution to the version. So its like a mix of each and every thing.
2016-12-17 19:26:52
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answer #8
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answered by ? 4
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cuz everyone's unique. Just like no two people have the same finger prints, no two people have the same handwriting.
2006-08-29 12:54:17
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answer #9
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answered by K 3
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I believe in near future we will forget how to write with a pen, the way we are using our keyboards. And in a little farther future we may even forget how to type as speech recognition technology improves.
2006-08-29 12:57:49
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answer #10
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answered by Rustic 4
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