When written in lowercase cursive italic, the letters g, y, and b all have a looped or curved shape that descends below the baseline of the text.
There is only Italic, not cursive unless you are able to enbed a cursive font (possible.)
If you mean italic handwriting, yes.
there are cursive,print,bold and italic. If you are looking for handwritings go on microsoft words
Aldus Manutius created cursive handwriting, he is italian.What Aldus and others of his time invented (that their age called "cursive") is not what the present age calls "cursive." Aldus and other Italian Renaissance writers invented a style that they called "corsiva" ( = "cursive") but that we, today, call "Italic handwriting." (To learn more about Italic handwriting.In the centuries after Aldus, people gradually tried to make Italic handwriting more and more decorative by joining more letters (changing some letter-shapes to make this possible) and adding loops and similar ornaments. Eventually, this produced the very different (and very difficult) kind of handwriting that we now call "cursive."
Some types of letter styles are block,ariel,cursive,bold,scriptand italic writing
The style of sloping writing is called italics or cursive. It is a form of writing where the letters are slanted to the right.
The sentence I'm writing is in ITALIC.This sentence isn't."italic" or "cursive" means a type of handwriting or a type of font where the letters slant to the right.The font attributes icons in Microsoft Word try to represent this font attribute graphically, with the letter B in bold for bold, I in italic for italic, etc., or in the font styles dialog box, the style names for these attributes will be shown with the attributes applied to them, like "Bold" and "Italic".
Barbara Getty has written: 'The Italic Handwriting Series/With Instructor's Manual' 'Write now' -- subject(s): Copybooks, Italic Writing, Penmanship 'Italic Handwriting Series Book G'
Luciano Agostiniani has written: 'Le \\' -- subject(s): Comparative Grammar, Etruscan, Etruscan Inscriptions, Etruscan language, Italic, Italic Inscriptions, Italic languages and dialects, Morphology 'Tabula Cortonensis'
I. V. TSvetaev has written: 'Inscriptiones Italiae inferioris dialecticae' -- subject- s -: Antiquities, Inscriptions, Italic, Italic Inscriptions
Kathryn A. Atkins has written: 'Masters of the italic letter' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Calligraphy, Copybooks, Facsimiles, History, Italic Writing, Penmanship
A word written in italic script/font.