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The Moldovan Cyrillic alphabet is still the official and the only accepted alphabet in Transnistria for this language. Moldovan Cyrillic spellings are also used in the media and in governmental publications in the Republic of Moldova for the names of settlements when writing in Russian, as opposed to using their Russian forms (e.g ...
The law speaks of a common Moldovan-Romanian linguistic identity. Until 1989 Moldova used the Cyrillic alphabet for writing a language that was, by that time, no different from standard Bucharest Romanian; in part of Moldova, the independent Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic, the old script is still used in schools and on street signs. Even ...
Moldovan or Moldavian (Latin alphabet: limba moldovenească, Moldovan Cyrillic alphabet: лимба молдовеняскэ) is one of the two local names for the Romanian language in Moldova. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Moldovan was declared the official language of Moldova in Article 13 of the constitution adopted in 1994, [ 3 ] while the 1991 Declaration ...
Major varieties (graiuri) of the Romanian language. The Moldavian dialect is spoken in the northeastern part of Romania, the Republic of Moldova, and small areas of Ukraine. It is the only Romance variety spoken east of the Eastern Carpathians. In detail, its distribution area covers the following administrative or historical regions:
The Romanian language used the cyrillic script up to the 19th century (see Romanian Cyrillic alphabet). The Moldovan language (an alternative name of the Romanian language in Bessarabia, Moldavian ASSR, Moldavian SSR and Moldova) used varieties of the Romanian Cyrillic alphabet in 1812–1918, and the Moldovan Cyrillic alphabet (derived from ...
It thus corresponds to g before front vowels in the Romanian Latin alphabet. The letter Џ had been used for a similar sound in the Romanian Cyrillic alphabet , used until the 19th century. Formerly, Zhe with breve was used in the Gagauz Cyrillic alphabet , in use from 1957 to 1993, also to represent /d͡ʒ/ , corresponding to c in the Gagauz ...
Also note that this layout contains one key extra compared to the template; this is because the Romanian keyboard layout uses the key left to the Z (what most keyboards call the Macro key). The S-komma looks a bit odd because Helvetica doesn't support this character and therefore Tahoma had to be used instead.
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