Cyrillic Alphabet Language Online
Upper Case | Lower Case | Pronunciation |
---|---|---|
А | а | a |
Б | б | b |
В | в | v |
Г | г | g,h |
Д | д | d |
Е | е | e, ye |
Ж | ж | zh |
З | з | z |
И | и | i, y |
Й | й | i, y |
К | к | k |
Л | л | l |
М | м | m |
Н | н | n |
О | о | o |
П | п | p |
Р | р | r |
С | с | s |
Т | т | t |
У | у | u |
Ф | ф | f |
Х | х | kh, h |
Ц | ц | ts |
Ч | ч | ch |
Ш | ш | sh |
Щ | щ | shch, sht |
Ъ | ъ | |
Ы | ы | y |
Ь | ь | |
Э | э | e |
Ю | ю | yu |
Я | я | ya |
Cyrillic Specific Characters
Upper Case | Lower Case | Pronunciation | Language |
---|---|---|---|
Ә, ә | a | Kazakh | |
Ғ, ғ | gh | Kazakh | |
Қ, қ | q | Kazakh | |
Ң, ң | ng | Kazakh | |
Ө, ө | o | Kazakh | |
Ұ, ұ | u | Kazakh | |
Ү, ү | u | Kazakh | |
Һ, һ | h | Kazakh | |
Ѓ, ѓ | gy | Macedonian | |
Ѕ, ѕ | dz | Macedonian | |
Ќ, ќ | ky | Macedonian | |
Ё, ё | yo | Russian | |
Ђ, ђ | ky | Serbian | |
Ј, ј | y | Serbian | |
Љ, љ | ly | Serbian | |
Њ, њ | ny | Serbian | |
Ћ, ћ | ty | Serbian | |
Џ, џ | dzh | Serbian | |
Ґ, ґ | g | Ukrainian | |
Є, є | ye | Ukrainian | |
І, і | i | Ukrainian | |
Ї, ї | yi | Ukrainian |
Cyrillic Alphabets (PDF Document)
A collection of Cyrillic-based language alphabets is presented. The contribution contains the data about more than 50 languages using Cyrillic script.
Fonts Cyrillic
The Cyrillic alphabet has traditionally been used to write Slavic languages (Russian, Belarusian, Bulgarian, Macedonian, Serbian, and Ukrainian).
Serbian Cyrillic alphabet (From Wikipedia)
The Serbian Cyrillic alphabet is official and traditional alphabet used to write the Serbian language ...
Fontlist Cyrillic
Fonts, software, and keyboards for multilingual computing.
Cyrillic writing
The Cyrillic alphabet (or azbuka, from the old name of the first two letters) is an alphabet used to write six natural Slavic languages (Belarusian, Bulgarian, Macedonian, Russian, Serbian, and Ukrainian) and many other languages of the former Soviet Union, Asia and Eastern Europe.
Cyrillic alphabet (From Wikipedia)
The Cyrillic alphabet is actually a family of alphabets, subsets of which are used by six Slavic national languages (Belarusian, Bulgarian, Macedonian, Russian, Serbian and Ukrainian) as well as non-Slavic (Kazakh, Uzbek, Kyrgyz and Tajik of the former Soviet Union, and Mongolian).
Language Posts: