Cursive Chinese
Cursive forms of Chinese characters are used in calligraphy; "running script" is the semi-cursive form and "grass script" is the cursive. The running aspect of this script has more to do with the formation and connectedness of strokes within an individual character than with connections between characters as in Western connected cursive. The latter are rare in Hanzi and the derived Japanese Kanji characters which are usually well separated by the writer.
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Semi-cursive style Calligraphy of Chinese poem by Mo Ruzheng
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classical poem in cursive script at Treasures of Ancient China exhibit
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8 cursive characters for dragon
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Calligraphy of both cursive and semi-cursive by Dong Qichang
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Four columns in cursive script quatrain poem, Quatrain on Heavenly Mountain. Attributed to Emperor Gaozong of Song, the tenth Chinese Emperor of the Song Dynasty
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Chinese poem in cursive
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One page of the album "Thousand Character classic in formal and Cursive script" attributed to Zhi Yong
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