Cursive Letter E Worksheets

These cursive letter E worksheets focus on capital E, lowercase e, and short words that begin with E. The letter E is one of the most common letters in English, so it is worth practicing slowly and clearly.

Lowercase e may look small, but it can be easy to rush. Its loop should stay open enough to read, especially when it appears between other small cursive letters.

You can open each worksheet by selecting the image or using the PDF button. The pages are free to print and are made for Letter size while also fitting A4 paper.

Big Cursive E Letters

This worksheet gives children more room to practice cursive E on its own. Capital E has a larger shape, while lowercase e uses a smaller loop that needs careful control.

The larger format is useful because lowercase e can become too tight when children write quickly. If the loop closes too much, the letter may start to look unclear inside a word.

This page helps children slow down and keep the letter open, light, and easy to recognize.

Cursive E Upper & Lowercase

This page places uppercase E and lowercase e together. The capital form takes more space, while lowercase e stays close to the writing line with a small looped motion.

Lowercase e should not become too tall or too narrow. It needs enough space to show the loop, but not so much height that it starts to look like another letter.

This comparison is helpful because children can see how different the two cursive forms are, even though they represent the same letter.

Cursive E 3 Letter Words

This worksheet moves from single letter practice into short E words. The goal is to help children see how lowercase e behaves when it begins a word and connects to the next letter.

In short words, cursive e often needs a gentle start and a clear exit stroke. If the first loop is too small, the word can look crowded before the next letter even begins.

The page is useful for practicing small, neat movement because E words usually ask children to keep the first letter clear without making it too large.

From Epsilon to Cursive E

The letter E is connected to the Greek epsilon and became part of the Latin alphabet through a long history of alphabet changes. Printed E is made with straight lines, but cursive E turns that familiar letter into a smoother handwriting movement.

That difference makes E interesting for practice. Children may recognize the printed letter quickly, but cursive e asks them to focus on a small loop, light spacing, and a clean connection into the next letter.

If your family, students, or class enjoyed these cursive E worksheets, we would love to hear from you in the comments.

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