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Writing & Speaking
25th August 2008
There are many different ways of forming the letters of the alphabet:
A
• Picture the letter a (or any letter for that matter) with two hooks. A hook by nature grabs, hence it shows greed. The double hook implies avarice.
• Imagine the left l...
25th August 2008
• Each of the foregoing letters has something different in its form and, therefore, in the interpretation to be put upon it. Often the same meaning can be derived from several different letters in one person's handwriting. This is because the same chara...
25th August 2008
In a general sense, loops show us the mental attitude of the writer.
Picture writing with neither an upper loop nor a lower one, only single strokes. If there had been loops, they would not have made the letters more readable. This writer reduces every...
25th August 2008
Pressure is a sign of how forceful the individual is. But first, we have to make sure that the writing tool is the one the writer usually employs. The amount of pressure one uses reflects the libido-the strength of the individual. So if the subject were t...
25th August 2008
There are four major types of connections: arcade, garland, angular, and thready. Often the graphologist finds more than one form of connection in the same writing. If one form is used more frequently than the others, the writer probably has the qualities...
25th August 2008
Picture connected writing. One of the major points that the graphologist looks for in his analysis is how the subject thinks. Each word is internally connected, each letter linked to the following one. Connected writing shows a person who is both practi...
25th August 2008
When someone starts to write a letter, he must immediately decide where and how he should form it. In school, we were taught to start with a soft-curving loop and end the same way. This was the Palmer Method. As the writer matures, he usually drops the ...
25th August 2008
When we see a small left margin and a wide right margin, the person is a real spender. He probably begins with a budget of some type, but his true nature soon gets the better of him. The left shows where he begins and the right shows where he is going. Si...
25th August 2008
Most writing has some degree of variation. The variations often occur in the writing slant and also, but not as frequently, in the base line. When the amount of change is insignificant (such as under 10 degrees), it is regarded as the normal flexibility...
25th August 2008
Though the letters f, j, p, q, y, and z also reach into the lower zone, for purposes of exactness graphologists concentrate their analysis on g and use the other lower-zone letters for back-up corroboration. Often other letters are useful only in certai...
25th August 2008
When the capital letter I-the ego-is written huge, this is the image the writer has of himself. Surely he is extremely egocentric, a megalomaniac.
A block letter shows culture, someone who reads. This is the capital I found in most books.
The unad...
25th August 2008
In this article, you will find virtually every possible kind of t bar. Any other t bar you may come across will probably be only a variation of one of these, and with practice, you should be able to see into which category of t bar it fits.
When we s...
25th August 2008
The authoritative Swiss graphologist Max Pulver (1889-1952) composed the chart below, showing many of the points discussed in the previous chapter. But in addition to demonstrating slant, it also demonstrates the zones.
If we were to superimpose a wr...
25th August 2008
Picture a man standing bolt upright--the very image of independence, separateness. In Figure 1, look at line AD-it is straight. When one writes in such a fashion more or less consistently, we say that his writing is vertical. In line AE, however, we hav...
25th August 2008
What is Graphology?
Graphology is the study of handwriting and what it can tell about the mind behind it.
When a person writes, it's his hand that does the writing, but his brain that does the dictating. There have been many cases of amputees who, hav...
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