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Russian orthography has been reformed officially and unofficially by changing the Russian alphabet over the course of the history of the Russian language. Several important reforms happened in the 18th–20th centuries.
The largest Russian dictionary with orthography; 1956 Russian orthographic codification; Criticism of the 1918 reform (in Russian) CyrAcademisator Bi-directional online transliteration for ALA-LC (diacritics), scientific, ISO/R 9, ISO 9, GOST 7.79B and others. Supports pre-reform characters; The Writing on the Wall: The Russian Orthographic ...
In the pre-reform Russian orthography, in Old East Slavic and in Old Church Slavonic the letter is called yer. Historically, the "hard sign" takes the place of a now-absent vowel , which is still preserved as a distinct vowel in Bulgarian (which represents it with ъ ) and Slovene (which is written in the Latin alphabet and writes it as e ...
Reforms of Russian orthography; Rules of Russian Orthography and Punctuation This page was last edited on 3 April 2022, at 13:10 (UTC). Text is ...
Aleksey Shakhmatov, founder of textology, prepared major 20th century reforms of Russian orthography, pioneered the systematic research of Old Russian and medieval Russian literature; Lev Shcherba, phonetist and phonologist, author of the glokaya kuzdra phrase
Pages in category "Orthography reform" The following 15 pages are in this category, out of 15 total. ... Reforms of Russian orthography; S. Substitutions of the ...
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.
The story of the letter yat and its elimination from the Russian alphabet makes for an interesting footnote in Russian cultural history. See Reforms of Russian orthography for details. A full list of words that were written with the letter yat at the beginning of 20th century can be found in the Russian Wikipedia.