Jewish people ... at least those who have learned to read ... read in the direction
in which the material they're reading was printed. For example, when reading
English, they read left to right. When reading Hebrew or Yiddish, they read right
to left. When reading traditional Mandarin, they read vertically. Etc.
It depends. Left handed but people who write with both are same. If you write with left then you could be slow because you have to move your left 'cos you write left-to-right. If you write with right then you could be fast because it is easier.
More people write with there right than they do with there left.
Has nothing to do with being European or not. Right handed people write with their right, left handed write with their left. There may be some backward places still around, where left handed people are forced to learn to write with their right. But they're getting rarer each year.
Most people are right-handed, with roughly 90% of the population being right-handed. Left-handed individuals make up about 10% of the population.
Reece mastin a right handed but most people think he is a Left handed
Right to left, top to bottom.
They write left to right if they write horizontally. When writing vertically they would write from right to left.
in fact Arabic is written from right to left
it means that u write with ur right hand instead of ur left
She had to write down the driving directions, including the dozens of left and right turns in the ten mile trip. She tried to write with her right hand, even though she is left-handed. In the 1950s, teachers forced "lefties" to write school work with their right hand. Many people confuse the sound-like words rite, right, and write.
Yes. Right handed people can pull their hand away as they write, to make room for more letters. Left handed people have to push their hand over paper they've already written on. Left handed people tend to have a different slant to their letters than right handed.
right