Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Letter of commendation from Ivan IV Vasilyevich to the Solovetsky Monastery (1539).. Skoropis (Russian: ско́ропись; Ukrainian: ско́ропис, romanized: skoropys) is a type of Cyrillic handwriting script that developed from semi-ustav [] in the second half of the 14th century [1] and was used in particular in offices and private office work, from which a modern Russian cursive ...
A ukase written in the 17th-century Russian chancery cursive. The Russian (and Cyrillic in general) cursive was developed during the 18th century on the base of the earlier Cyrillic tachygraphic writing (ско́ропись, skoropis, "rapid or running script"), which in turn was the 14th–17th-century chancery hand of the earlier Cyrillic bookhand scripts (called ustav and poluustav).
The following other wikis use this file: Usage on ar.wikipedia.org أبجدية روسية; Usage on ar.wikibooks.org روسية/أبجدية; Usage on ar.wikiversity.org
This work has been released into the public domain by its author, Peter Fitzgerald.This applies worldwide. In some countries this may not be legally possible; if so: Peter Fitzgerald grants anyone the right to use this work for any purpose, without any conditions, unless such conditions are required by law.
In italics and handwriting, capital Pe looks identical to the Greek capital Pi in these forms. The lowercase forms, however, differ among the languages that use the Cyrillic alphabet. Small italic Cyrillic Pe п in the majority of fonts or handwritten styles looks like the small italic Latin N n .
Ъ used to be a very common letter in the Russian alphabet. This is because before the 1918 reform, any word ending with a non-palatalized consonant was written with a final Ъ — e.g., pre-1918 вотъ vs. post-reform вот. The reform eliminated the use of Ъ in this context, leaving it the least common letter in the Russian alphabet.
A page with the letter forms for [ja] (first line) with Tsar Peter's choice of Я instead of Ѧ or Ꙗ In the specimens of the civil script produced for Peter I, forms of ꙗ, ѧ and я were grouped together; Peter removed the first two, leaving only я in the modern alphabet, and its use in Russian remains the same to the present day. It was ...
Russian spelling, which is mostly phonemic in practice, is a mix of morphological and phonetic principles, with a few etymological or historic forms, and occasional grammatical differentiation. The punctuation, originally based on Byzantine Greek , was in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries reformulated on the models of French and German ...