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  2. Tajik alphabet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tajik_alphabet

    Advertisement in Cyrillic for the admission of the graduate students by the research institutes of the Tajik Academy of Sciences A biscriptal sign incorporating an English word, "Zenith", written in the Latin script, and Tajik written in Cyrillic An illustration from Kommunisti Isfara, a newspaper published in Isfara in northern Tajikistan ...

  3. Tajik language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tajik_language

    In the Tajik Soviet Socialist Republic, the use of the Latin script was later replaced in 1939 by the Cyrillic script. [46] The Tajik alphabet added six additional letters to the Cyrillic script inventory and these additional letters are distinguished in the Tajik orthography by the use of diacritics. [47]

  4. Languages of Tajikistan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languages_of_Tajikistan

    The state (national) language (Russian: государственный язык, gosudarstvennyj jazyk; Tajik: забони давлатӣ, zabon-i davlatī) of the Republic of Tajikistan is Tajik, which is written in the Tajik Cyrillic alphabet. Tajik speakers have no problems communicating with Persian speakers from Iran and Dari speakers ...

  5. Tajikistan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tajikistan

    The state (national) language (Tajik: забони давлатӣ, romanized: zaboni davlatí, Russian: государственный язык, romanized: gosudarstvennyy yazyk) of the Republic of Tajikistan is Tajik, which is written in the Tajik Cyrillic alphabet. Millions of native Tajik speakers live in neighboring Uzbekistan and in Russia.

  6. Cyrillic alphabets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyrillic_alphabets

    A number of languages have switched from Cyrillic to either a Roman-based orthography or a return to a former script. Cyrillic alphabets continue to be used in several Slavic (Russian, Ukrainian, Serbian, Bulgarian, Macedonian, Belarusian) and non-Slavic (Kazakh, Uzbek, Kyrgyz, Tajik, Gagauz, Mongolian) languages.

  7. I with macron (Cyrillic) - Wikipedia

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

    I with macron (Ӣ ӣ; italics: Ӣ ӣ) is a letter of the Cyrillic script. In Tajik, it represents a stressed close front unrounded vowel /i/ at the end of a word. In Kildin Sami on the Kola Peninsula and Mansi in western Siberia, it represents long /iː/. Both these sounds are pronounced like the ee in “feet”.

  8. U with macron (Cyrillic) - Wikipedia

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

    U with macron is used in the alphabet of the Tajik language, where it represents the close-mid central rounded vowel, /ɵ/.Accordingly, although the letter shape is a modification of У , the only aspect of the sound shared with /u/ is that both are relatively close, rounded vowels.

  9. Bukharian (Judeo-Tajik dialect) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bukharian_(Judeo-Tajik...

    Bukharian, also known as Judeo-Bukharic and Judeo-Tajik (autonym: Bukhori, Hebrew script: בוכארי, Cyrillic: бухорӣ, Latin: Buxorī), [a] is a Judeo-Persian dialect historically spoken by the Bukharan Jews of Central Asia.