Affiliation:
1. University of Northern Colorado, USA
Abstract
This chapter examines visual-verbal connections that can be perceived in individual letters. Cultural patterns that build our visual literacy include visual writings in many modes and styles, visible stories, and visual rhetoric. The text examines old ways of communication attained by developing writing systems and discusses kinds of characters making different alphabets. Further text is about human characters, traits of their personalities, and then examining the visual power of characters that constitute the modern English alphabet by developing alphabet-based projects linking letters with human characters and human emotions.
Reference17 articles.
1. Barker, C. (2018). How many syllables does English have? Retrieved from http://semarch.linguistics.fas.nyu.edu/barker/Syllables/index.txt
2. Cavazza, M., Earnshaw, R., Magnenat-Thalmann, N., & Thalmann, D. (1998). Motion Control of Virtual Humans. IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications. Retrieved from https://www.academia.edu/14932771/Motion_control_of_virtual_humans?auto=download
3. Claiborne, R., & Editors of Time-Life Books. (1974). The Birth of Writing. Alexandria, VA: Time-Life Books. Library of Congress catalogue card number 74-83646.