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  2. Help:IPA/Ukrainian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:IPA/Ukrainian

    Ukrainian distinguishes hard (unpalatalized or plain) and soft (palatalized) consonants (both phonetically and orthographically). Soft consonants, most of which are denoted by a superscript ʲ , are pronounced with the body of the tongue raised toward the hard palate , like the articulation of the y sound in yes .

  3. Phonetic keyboard layout - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phonetic_keyboard_layout

    The Russian and Ukrainian Phonetic Keyboard 2.0 is designed for Russian and Ukrainian speakers using standard QWERTY keyboards. It maps Cyrillic characters to phonetically similar English letters, enabling efficient bilingual typing without modifying the physical keyboard layout.

  4. Ukrainian phonology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ukrainian_phonology

    if V is the Common Slavic *e, then the vowel in Ukrainian mutated to /a/, e.g., Common Slavic *žitĭje became Ukrainian /ʒɪˈtʲːa/ (життя́) if V is Common Slavic *ĭ, then the combination became /ɛj/, e.g., genitive plural in Common Slavic *myšĭjĭ became Ukrainian /mɪˈʃɛj/ (мише́й)

  5. Ukrainian alphabet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ukrainian_alphabet

    His reforms discredited and labelled "nationalist deviation", Skrypnyk committed suicide rather than face a show trial and execution or deportation. The Ukrainian letter ge ґ, [5] and the phonetic combinations ль, льо, ля were eliminated, and Russian etymological forms were reintroduced (for example, the use of -іа- in place of -я ...

  6. Ukrainian Latin alphabet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ukrainian_Latin_alphabet

    The Ukrainian Latin alphabet [a] is the form of the Latin script used for writing, transliteration, and retransliteration of Ukrainian. The Latin alphabet has been proposed or imposed several times in the history in Ukraine , but it has never replaced the dominant Cyrillic Ukrainian alphabet .

  7. Talk:Ukrainian alphabet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Ukrainian_alphabet

    The use of letters є, ї, ю, and я - is traditional, also non-phonetic, because normally they stand for combinations of: й+е, й+і, й+у, й+а or ь+е, ь+у, ь+а meanwhile the same combinations for 'o' do not have a special letter and we write йо and ьо. As you can see Ukrainian orthography is not that phonetic.

  8. Talk:Ukrainian phonology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Ukrainian_phonology

    Danylenko & Vakulenko 1995. This is a compilation of phonetic results described in Bilodid 1969, with minor (and not experimentally proved) additions. And they use incorrect IPA notations (for example, h for Cyrillic "г"). So the value of this work is only as an English version of Bilodid 1969 for the English-reading audience.

  9. Dotted I (Cyrillic) - Wikipedia

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

    The dotted i (І і; italics: І і), also called Ukrainian I, decimal i (и десятеричное, after its former numeric value) or soft-dotted i, is a letter of the Cyrillic script. It commonly represents the close front unrounded vowel /i/ , like the pronunciation of i in English "mach i ne".