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likeorhate
Last updated
2013-05-19 14:17:34
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Summary

O alfabeto cirílico é um alfabeto cujas variantes são utilizadas para a grafia de seis línguas nacionais eslavas (bielorrusso, búlgaro, macedônio, russo, sérvio e ucraniano), além do ruteno, e outras línguas extintas. Ademais é usado por várias línguas não-eslavas, faladas na antiga União Soviética - como o mongol, o cazaque, o uzbeque, o quirguiz e o tadjique, entre outras da Europa Oriental, do Cáucaso e da Sibéria. Com a entrada da Bulgária na União Europeia, em 1. More information...

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Related

 
  • The Abkhaz alphabet is an alphabet for the Abkhaz language which consists of 62 letters. Abkhaz did not become a written language until the 19th century. Hitherto, Abkhazians, especially princes, had been using Greek (up to c. 9th century), Georgian (9–19th centuries), and partially Turkish (18th century) languages. The Abkhaz word for alphabet is анбан (anban), which was borrowed from Georgian ანბანი (anbani).
    http://commons.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Abxaz_lat%2BIPA.png
  • The modern Russian alphabet is a variant of the Cyrillic alphabet and contains 33 letters. It was introduced into Kievan Rus' at the time of Vladimir the Great's conversion to Christianity.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Zh.jpg
  • The old Cyrillic alphabet is a writing system developed in the First Bulgarian Empire in the ninth or tenth century to write the Old Church Slavonic liturgical language. The modern Cyrillic alphabet continues to be used primarily for Slavic languages, and for Asian languages that were under Russian cultural influence during the 20th century.
    http://commons.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Cyrillicalphabet.png
  • Titlo is an extended diacritic symbol first used in old Cyrillic manuscripts, e.g. , in Old Church Slavonic and Old East Slavic languages. The word is a borrowing from the Greek "τίτλος", "title". The titlo still appears in inscriptions on modern icons and in service books printed in Church Slavonic. The titlo is drawn as a zigzag line over a text.
  • Volapuk encoding is a slang term for rendering the letters of the Cyrillic alphabet with Latin ones. Unlike Translit (in which characters are replaced to sound the same), in volapuk characters can be replaced to look or sound the same.
  • In Republic of Azerbaijan, the Azerbaijani alphabet may refer to either of two alphabets used to write the Azerbaijani language: one Cyrillic-based alphabet and one Latin-based alphabet. These superseded a previous version formed from the Arabic alphabet. In Iran, the Perso-Arabic script is used to write the Azeri language, with several characters borrowed from other Arabic-based writing systems or invented for Azeri.
  • The soft sign (Ь, ь), also known as (the front) yer, is a letter of the Cyrillic alphabet. In Old Church Slavonic, it represented a short (or "reduced") front vowel. As with its companion, the back yer, the vowel phoneme it designated was later partly dropped and partly merged with other vowels.
  • The Ukrainian alphabet is the set of letters used to write Ukrainian, the official language of Ukraine. It is one of the national variations of the Cyrillic writing system. In Ukrainian it is called Украї́нська абе́тка, Ukrayins’ka abetka (from the initial letters a and be), алфаві́т, alfavit, or archaically азбу́ка, azbuka (from the acrophonic early Cyrillic letter names az and buki).
    http://commons.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Azbuka_1574_by_Ivan_Fyodorov.jpg

 

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