Three centuries of Cyrllic and Glagolitic alphabet tables from Western sources. The illustrations have been enhanced, cleaned up and digitally restored.
In this volume, we are publishing three centuries of Cyrillic and Glagolitic alphabet tables from Western sources. The illustrations presented here have been enhanced, cleaned up and digitally restored. Most of them have never been published in such a high quality before. The second edition has been expanded to feature even more material.
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 26. Chapters: Saints Cyril and Methodius, Rough breathing, Cyrillic, Relationship of Cyrillic and Glagolitic alphabets, Early Cyrillic alphabet, Faux Cyrillic, Slavonic lettering, Volapuk encoding, Iotation, Translit, Soft sign, Titlo, Cyrillic numerals, Smooth breathing, Russian spelling alphabet, Drahomanivka, Slavica, Russian cursive, Oktoikh, 1491, Vyaz, Combining Cyrillic Millions, Combining Cyrillic Hundred Thousands, ISO 15924: Cyrl. Excerpt: The Cyrillic script is encoded in four blocks in Unicode, all in BMP: The characters in the range U+0400-U+045F are basically the characters from ISO 8859-5 moved upward by 864 positions. The next characters in the Cyrillic block, range U+0460-U+0489, are historical letters, some being still used for Church Slavonic. The characters in the range U+048A-U+04FF and the complete Cyrillic Supplement block (U+0500-U+052F) are additional letters for various languages that are written with Cyrillic script. Two characters are added in the block IPA Extesions: and, which are introduced to complete the Uralic Phonetic Alphabet. Unicode includes few precomposed accented Cyrillic letters, the others can be combined by adding U+0301 ("combining acute accent") after the accented vowel (e.g., ). This table does include changes in Unicode 5.1, 5.2 and 6.0. Revisions to the existing Cyrillic blocks and the addition of Cyrillic Extended A (2DE0...2DFF) and Cyrillic Extended B (A640...A69F), with support for the early Cyrillic alphabet, Abkhaz, Mordvin, Kurdish, Aleut, Chuvash, Tati and Juhuri In the table below, small letters are ordered according to their Unicode numbers; capital letters are placed immediately before the corresponding small letters. Standard Unicode names and canonical decompositions are included. The Cyrillic block (U+0400 - U+04FF) was added to the...
This book contains a synchronic grammar and grammatical dictionaries of Old Church Slavic. The framework is based on a substantially revised version of the classical descriptive methodology. The intent is to improve on the classical monographs by Vaillant, Diels, Lunt in the direction of utmost completeness, explicitness, and deliberate consistency between the grammatical structure, the corpus of texts (limited to the seven oldest OCS manuscripts), and the dictionaries. The grammar is intended as a set of rules that provide a complete characterization of any OCS wordform. Peculiarities in the language of each source are described as systematic departures from canonical OCS, a conventional constructed variety primarily described by the grammar. The book is addressed to linguists working in Slavic studies, as well as to specialists in the general theory of grammar, especially phonologists and morphologists.
Colorful chart for learning Russian alphabets. This Russian alphabet chart is aimed to make learning easy for first time Lerner by providing each Russian alphabet with picture of associated object, pronunciation and bilingual word. Teach Russian alphabets with this 17 inch x 24 inch alphabet poster.