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iotified

A Wisdom Archive on iotified

iotified

A selection of articles related to iotified

More material related to Iotified can be found here:
Index of Articles
related to
Iotified
iotified

ARTICLES RELATED TO iotified

iotified: Encyclopedia - Apostrophe mark

apostrophe ( ' ) ( ’ ) brackets ( ( ) ) ( [ ] ) ( { } ) ( 〈 〉 ) colon ( : ) comma ( , ) dashes ( ‒ ) ( – ) ( — ) ( ― ) ellipsis ( … ) ( ... ) exclamation mark ( ! ) full stop/period ( . ) hyphen ( - ) ( ‐ ) interrobang ( < ...

Including:

Read more here: » Apostrophe mark: Encyclopedia - Apostrophe mark

iotified: Encyclopedia - Belarusian language

Belarusian (беларуская мова) is the language of the Belarusian people. It is one of the three East Slavic languages and is spoken in and around Belarus. It shares some vocabulary with the languages of the neighboring Slavic nations, most notably with Ukrainian, Polish, Russian and Slovakian. It is also known as "Belarusan", "Byelorussian", "Belorussian", or "Belarusian". The word "Byelorussian" is an adjective derived from the transliteration of the Russian name of the country (Byelorussia). It was in predo ...

Including:

Read more here: » Belarusian language: Encyclopedia - Belarusian language

iotified: Encyclopedia - Yus

Little Yus (Ѧ, ѧ) and Big Yus (Ѫ, ѫ), or Jus, are the letters representing two Common Slavonic nasal vowels, in the early Cyrillic and Glagolitic alphabets. Each can occur in iotified form (Ѩ, ѩ,Ѭ, ѭ), as a ligature with the letter I. Phonetically, Little Yus represents IPA [ɛ̃], and Big Yus IPA [ɔ̃]. Names of the letters do not imply capitalization: both Little and Big Yus ...

Read more here: » Yus: Encyclopedia - Yus

iotified: Encyclopedia II - Belarusian language - History

The modern Belarusian language has evolved considerably from its early roots, the dialects of Old East Slavic (Common East Slavic) spoken in the territory of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, Rus' and Samogitia. On the basis of Belarusian (and Ukrainian) dialects a chancellery language was developed that afterwards became a fully-fledged Belarusian-Ukrainian literary language called Ruthenian (but in Belarusian context often also called Old Belarusian; the name used by the speakers themselves was the name inherited from Old East Sl ...

See also:

Belarusian language, Belarusian language - History, Belarusian language - Orthography, Belarusian language - Belarusian Cyrillic alphabet, Belarusian language - Belarusian Latin alphabet, Belarusian language - Transliteration, Belarusian language - Grammar, Belarusian language - Phonetics, Belarusian language - Vocabulary, Belarusian language - Comparison, Belarusian language - Nouns nazounik, Belarusian language - Pronouns zajmiennik

Read more here: » Belarusian language: Encyclopedia II - Belarusian language - History

iotified: Encyclopedia II - Apostrophe mark - English language usage

Apostrophe mark - Non-English names. Irish surnames often contain apostrophes, for instance the name O'Reilly. This arose from a rendering of the Irish Ó. Some Scottish surnames use an apostrophe, such as M'Gregor. The apostrophe here is a contraction where the Scots prefix Mc or Mac would normally appear. French and Italian surnames sometimes contain apostrophes, e.g. D'Angelo. Other times, foreign names that would have used an accented character have a ...

See also:

Apostrophe mark, Apostrophe mark - English language usage, Apostrophe mark - Non-English names, Apostrophe mark - Geographic names, Apostrophe mark - Things to note, Apostrophe mark - Tip, Apostrophe mark - Greengrocers' apostrophe, Apostrophe mark - Derivation, Apostrophe mark - Other languages, Apostrophe mark - Alternative uses, Apostrophe mark - Computers and Unicode, Apostrophe mark - Entering apostrophes, Apostrophe mark - Eight-bit encodings

Read more here: » Apostrophe mark: Encyclopedia II - Apostrophe mark - English language usage

iotified: Encyclopedia II - Belarusian language - Grammar

Belarusian language - Phonetics. The most prominent phonetic features of Belarusian are akannie (аканьне) – the tendency to pronounce unstressed "o" and "e" as clear open front unrounded vowel "a"; dzekanie (дзеканьне) – the pronunciation of palatalized d as soft affricate dz' (dź); tsekanie (цеканьне) – the pronunciation of palatalized t as soft affricate ts' (ć); strong palatalization of ś (сь) and ź (зь). See also:

Belarusian language, Belarusian language - History, Belarusian language - Orthography, Belarusian language - Belarusian Cyrillic alphabet, Belarusian language - Belarusian Latin alphabet, Belarusian language - Transliteration, Belarusian language - Grammar, Belarusian language - Phonetics, Belarusian language - Vocabulary, Belarusian language - Comparison, Belarusian language - Nouns nazounik, Belarusian language - Pronouns zajmiennik

Read more here: » Belarusian language: Encyclopedia II - Belarusian language - Grammar

iotified: Encyclopedia II - Belarusian language - Orthography

The Belarusian language was written not only in the Cyrillic alphabet, but previously also in its original Łacinka (лацінка - "Latin alphabet"), and also in Arabica (Arabic script, used by Tatars). Today, the Arabic script is no longer used, but some people continue to write in Łacinka, although officially only the Cyrillic script is supported. More articles on Belarusian alphabets are here. See also an article about the unique Belarusian letter Ў. Belarus ...

See also:

Belarusian language, Belarusian language - History, Belarusian language - Orthography, Belarusian language - Belarusian Cyrillic alphabet, Belarusian language - Belarusian Latin alphabet, Belarusian language - Transliteration, Belarusian language - Grammar, Belarusian language - Phonetics, Belarusian language - Vocabulary, Belarusian language - Comparison, Belarusian language - Nouns nazounik, Belarusian language - Pronouns zajmiennik

Read more here: » Belarusian language: Encyclopedia II - Belarusian language - Orthography

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