The Free Press Journal

Here’s some gyaan about the letter ‘g’

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Most people cannot identify or are unaware of the more common version of the lowercase print letter “g” despite seeing it millions of times in everyday books, newspapers and emails, a study has found.

According to researcher­s at the Johns Hopkins University in the US, most people don't even know that two forms of the letter - one usually handwritte­n, the other typeset - exist. “Even if they do, they can not write the typeset one we usually see. They can not even pick the correct version of it out of a lineup,” researcher­s suggest.

The findings, published in the Journal of Experiment­al Psychology: Human Perception & Performanc­e, show the importance writing plays in learning letters. “We think that if we look at something enough, especially if we have to pay attention to its shape as we do during reading, then we would know what it looks like, but our results suggest that’s not always the case,” said Michael McCloskey, researcher at Johns Hopkins.

“What we think may be happening here is that we learn the shapes of most letters in part because we have to write them in school. ‘Looptail g’ is something we're never taught to write, so we may not learn its shape as well,” McCloskey said.

Unlike most letters, “g” has two lowercase print versions. There is the opentail one that most everyone uses when writing by hand; it looks like a loop with a fishhook hanging from it. The looptail g, which is more common, is seen in everyday fonts like Times New Roman and Calibri and, hence, in most printed and typed material.

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