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  2. Cyrillization of Chinese - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyrillization_of_Chinese

    The Palladius system is the official Russian standard for transcribing Chinese into Russian, with variants existing for Ukrainian, Belarusian and the various languages of Russia. It was created by Palladius Kafarov, a Russian sinologist and monk who spent thirty years in China in the nineteenth century. Other languages that use the Cyrillic ...

  3. Cyrillization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyrillization

    The source language or writing system (English, French, Arabic, Hindi, Kazakh in Latin alphabet, Chinese, Japanese, etc.), The destination language or writing system (Russian, Ukrainian, Bulgarian, Kazakh in Cyrillic, etc.), the goals of the systems: to render occasional foreign words (mostly personal and place names) for use in newspapers or ...

  4. Cyrillic alphabets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyrillic_alphabets

    It is the basis of alphabets used in various languages, past and present, Slavic origin, and non-Slavic languages influenced by Russian. As of 2011, around 252 million people in Eurasia use it as the official alphabet for their national languages. About half of them are in Russia. Cyrillic is one of the most-used writing systems in the world.

  5. Russian alphabet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_alphabet

    The Russian alphabet (ру́сский алфави́т, russkiy alfavit, [a] or ру́сская а́збука, russkaya azbuka, [b] more traditionally) is the script used to write the Russian language.

  6. Russian Chinese - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_Chinese

    Chinese Russian or Russian Chinese may refer to: Sino-Russian relations (c.f. "a Chinese-Russian treaty") Language. Kyakhta Russian-Chinese Pidgin; Russian methods for writing the Chinese language: Cyrillization of Chinese; Latinxua Sin Wenz; Dungan language, a Sinitic language spoken in Russia by the Dungan people; People and ethnic groups

  7. Chechen language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chechen_language

    Chechen (/ ˈ tʃ ɛ tʃ ɛ n / CHETCH-en, [4] / tʃ ə ˈ tʃ ɛ n / chə-CHEN; [5] Нохчийн мотт, Noxçiyn mott, [6] [ˈnɔxt͡ʃĩː muɔt]) is a Northeast Caucasian language spoken by approximately 1.8 million people, mostly in the Chechen Republic and by members of the Chechen diaspora throughout Russia and the rest of Europe, Jordan, Austria, Turkey, Azerbaijan, Ukraine ...

  8. Ya (Cyrillic) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ya_(Cyrillic)

    In Russian, before a soft consonant, it is [æ], like in the English "cat". If a hard consonant follows я or none, the result is an open vowel, usually . This difference does not exist in the other Cyrillic languages. In non-stressed positions, the vowel reduction depends on the language and the dialect.

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