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Russian Latin

Name: Anonymous 2010-03-29 16:03

My variant of Latin alphabet for Russian:

А а - A a
Б б - B b
В в - V v
Г г - G g
Д д - D d
Е е - Je je
Ё ё - Jo jo
Ж ж - Ž ž
З з - Z z
И и - I i
Й й - J j
К к - K k
Л л - Ł ł
М м - M m
Н н - N n
О о - O o
П п - P p
Р р - R r
С с - S s
Т т - T t
У у - U u
Ф ф - F f
Х х - Ch ch
Ц ц - C c
Ч ч - Č č
Ш ш - Š š
Щ щ - Šč šč
Ъ ъ - no exact match
Ы ы - Y y
Ь ь - long explanation, see below
Э э - E e
Ю ю - Ju ju
Я я - Ja ja

Indication of palatalization is similar to Polish, but 'e' is always palatal in Russian and hence does not require 'i' before it. More letters can have kreska over them. Usage of 'y' follows the Cyrillic rules.

Бь бь - B́ b́
Вь вь - V́ v́
Дь дь - D́ d́
Зь зь - Ź ź
Ль ль - L l
Мь мь - Ḿ ḿ
Нь нь - Ń ń
Пь пь - Ṕ ṕ
Рь рь - Ŕ ŕ
Сь сь - Ś ś
Ть ть - T́ t́
Фь фь - F́ f́

Name: Anonymous 2010-03-29 19:08

>>9
Well, I'm not pole, but I know basic polish phonology.

>>How many common words have it as a meaningful distinction? Two, three? These are extreme minority.
That is the issue. I'm a proponent of the logical approach to this, so the word reads exactly like it's written and you don't need to know how the word sounds to read it. So when one needs to express a phonetical value he just writes it as it's spoken.

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