Social Sciences, asked by viveksinghal5846, 1 year ago

Shikaste style of handwriting made the reading of persian

Answers

Answered by vedantsc173
1

Answer:

it mad understanding  ez

Explanation:

Answered by alafiyasurkasl
0

Answer:

Shiksate refers to difficult-to-read and comprehending handwriting. Shikastle is more dense and challenging to write.

Explanation:

Shikaste is a type of "Arabic calligraphy" used for  Urdu and Persian languages.

  • "Shikaste" is difficult to read and understand the writing style.  This is due to the fact that the writing style is nearly illegible.
  • Shikaste is similar to nasta'liq, although much more open. Indeed, the term (shikaste) implies "broken", as the writing violates nasta'liq norms.
  • With shikaste, the calligrapher has significantly greater leeway to improvise, stretching strokes out, connecting letters in ways that most Arabic scripts don't allow, and piling up the writing in a variety of ways.
  • Shikaste, to me, is a type of improvisation. Compare this to the basic pattern of Persian and Arabic music (Nasta'liq).

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