• The Ukrainian orthography of 1904 (Ukrainian: Український правопис 1904 року, romanized: Ukrainskyi pravopys 1904 roku) is the official Ukrainian orthography...
    3 KB (203 words) - 06:27, 9 October 2022
  • The Ukrainian orthography (Ukrainian: Український правопис, romanized: Ukrainskyi pravopys) is the orthography for the Ukrainian language, a system of generally...
    45 KB (3,056 words) - 13:13, 13 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Ukrainian Latin alphabet
    The Ukrainian Latin alphabet (Ukrainian: Українська латиниця, romanized: Ukrainska latynytsia or Латинка, Latynka) is the form of the Latin script used...
    35 KB (1,707 words) - 03:58, 20 May 2024
  • The romanization of Ukrainian, or Latinization of Ukrainian, is the representation of the Ukrainian language in Latin letters. Ukrainian is natively written...
    50 KB (3,893 words) - 04:00, 11 April 2024
  • Hrinchenkivka (category Ukrainian orthography)
    Hrinchenkivka (Ukrainian: Грінченківка) or hrinchevychivka (Ukrainian: Грінчевичівка) was Ukrainian orthography introduced by Borys Hrinchenko’s Ukrainian-Russian...
    6 KB (457 words) - 18:35, 23 March 2024
  • Help:IPA/Irish for a comparison of the IPA system with those used in learners' materials. Irish orthography is the set of conventions used to write Irish...
    67 KB (3,057 words) - 17:09, 8 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Zhelekhivka
    Zhelekhivka (category Ukrainian orthography)
    Zhelekhivka (Ukrainian: Желехі́вка) was Ukrainian phonetic orthography in Western Ukraine from 1886 to 1922 (sometimes until the 1940s), created by Yevhen...
    16 KB (1,526 words) - 06:19, 14 July 2023
  • Thumbnail for Hard sign
    ір), as the debelo jer (дебело їер, "fat er") in pre-reform Serbian orthography, and as ayirish belgisi in the Uzbek Cyrillic alphabet. The letter is...
    14 KB (1,650 words) - 18:36, 5 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Latvian language
    modern Latvian alphabet, which slowly replaced the old orthography used before. Another feature of the language, in common with its sister language Lithuanian...
    50 KB (4,806 words) - 22:45, 16 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Ge (Cyrillic)
    counterpart /ɣʲ/. In Ukrainian and Rusyn, it represents a voiced glottal fricative [ɦ], a breathy voiced counterpart of the English [h]. In Ukrainian and Rusyn,...
    8 KB (751 words) - 05:53, 7 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Belarusian language
    Belarusians, which comprise about 19.7% of Belarusians living in Ukraine (data from 2001 Ukrainian census In Ukrainian). In Poland, the Belarusian language...
    81 KB (8,725 words) - 12:21, 6 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Short I (Cyrillic)
    Short I (Cyrillic) (category Articles containing Ukrainian-language text)
    the middle of the 17th century, the differentiation between ⟨И⟩ and ⟨Й⟩ is obligatory in the Russian variant of Church Slavonic orthography (used for the...
    7 KB (638 words) - 13:08, 1 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Early Cyrillic alphabet
    Early Cyrillic alphabet (category History of writing)
    ISBN 0-8020-3105-6 Simovyc, V., and J. B. Rudnyckyj, "The history of Ukrainian orthography", in Ukraine: a concise encyclopædia, volume 1 (op cit). Zamora, J.,...
    37 KB (2,088 words) - 17:24, 9 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Soft sign
    Soft sign (category Articles containing Ukrainian-language text)
    Belarusian and Ukrainian, but it is not used so extensively as in Russian. Ukrainian uses a quite different repertoire of vowel letters from those of Russian...
    14 KB (1,681 words) - 17:56, 18 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Romanian alphabet
    appear in. * See Comma-below (ș and ț) versus cedilla (ş and ţ). Romanian orthography does not use accents or diacritics – these are secondary symbols added...
    47 KB (4,908 words) - 01:13, 18 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Mykola Skrypnyk
    Mykola Skrypnyk (category Directors of the State Planning Committee of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic)
    Oleksiiovych Skrypnyk (Ukrainian: Микола Олексійович Скрипник; 25 January [O.S. 13 January] 1872 – 7 July 1933), was a Ukrainian Bolshevik revolutionary...
    21 KB (2,069 words) - 21:48, 15 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Dnipro
    Ukrainskyi pravopys [Ukrainian Orthography] (PDF) (in Ukrainian) (1st ed.). Kharkiv: Ukrainian State Publisher, USRR National Commissariat of Education. 1929...
    215 KB (19,063 words) - 21:05, 18 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Nikolai Linevich
    Nikolai Linevich (category Articles containing Ukrainian-language text)
    Ukrainian: Ліневич Микола Петрович; 5 January 1839 [O.S. 24 December 1838] – 23 April [O.S. 10 April] 1908) was a career military officer, General of...
    7 KB (600 words) - 17:44, 25 December 2023
  • Thumbnail for I (Cyrillic)
    But in Ukrainian and Rusyn, the two letters have different pronunciations. Other modern orthographies for Slavic languages eliminated one of the two...
    13 KB (1,420 words) - 20:38, 24 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Ahatanhel Krymsky
    Ahatanhel Krymsky (category Full Members of the All-Ukrainian Academy of Sciences)
    vocabulary and orthography of literary Ukrainian in the 1920s. In this activity he rejected the Galician orthographic tradition. He was the editor of the first...
    12 KB (1,092 words) - 13:27, 17 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for El (Cyrillic)
    for details. Serbian and Macedonian orthographies use a separate letter Љ for the soft /l/ – it looks as a ligature of El with the soft sign (Ь). In these...
    6 KB (459 words) - 01:09, 14 December 2023
  • Thumbnail for Ya (Cyrillic)
    present day. It was similarly adopted for the standardised orthographies of modern Ukrainian and Belarusian. In nineteenth-century Bulgaria, both Old Cyrillic...
    9 KB (1,111 words) - 00:45, 24 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for Oleksander Barvinsky
    Oleksander Barvinsky (category Articles containing Ukrainian-language text)
    textbooks for Ukrainian schools, and was largely responsible for the use of Ukrainian orthography and for the term of Ruthenian-Ukrainian within the schools...
    7 KB (491 words) - 16:26, 26 September 2023
  • Thumbnail for Caucasus Viceroyalty (1801–1917)
    Caucasus Viceroyalty (1801–1917) (category Viceroyalties of the Russian Empire)
    through the offices of glavnoupravlyayushchiy ("high commissioner") (1801–1844, 1882–1902) and namestnik ("viceroy") (1844–1882, 1904–1917), situated in...
    18 KB (1,031 words) - 14:27, 15 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Russification
    the use of Russian and favour Ukrainian. The Russification policy included various instruments, most notably an explicit ban on using Ukrainian language...
    91 KB (10,778 words) - 10:30, 30 March 2024
  • Республикасининг давлат мадҳияси (original orthography) General Bristow, Michael Jamieson (2006-10-28). National Anthems of the World. Cassell. ISBN 0-304-36826-1...
    100 KB (2,782 words) - 21:43, 14 May 2024
  • the Ukrainian diasporas, succeeding generations of ethnic Ukrainians became Baháʼís and some have interacted with Ukraine previous to development of the...
    45 KB (5,066 words) - 22:46, 15 December 2023
  • Thumbnail for Old Norse
    language, many of which are related to fishing and sailing. The vowel phonemes mostly come in pairs of long and short. The standardized orthography marks the...
    112 KB (8,820 words) - 17:45, 8 May 2024
  • reducing unwritten languages and foreign graphic systems to a uniform orthography in European letters, Williams & Norgate, London, W. Hertz, Berlin, 1863...
    48 KB (5,077 words) - 19:48, 15 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Mykhailo Maksymovych
    Mykhailo Maksymovych (category Articles containing Ukrainian-language text)
    Maksymovych (Ukrainian: Михайло Олександрович Максимович; 3 September 1804 – 10 November 1873) was a professor in plant biology, Ukrainian historian and...
    15 KB (1,904 words) - 02:00, 9 May 2024