
[Home Page]
[Language Page]
[Writing Page]
[Evolution of the Latin Alphabet]
[Evolution of Writing Systems]
[Amharic]
[Arabic]
[Aramaic]
[Armenian]
[Bengali]
[Berber]
[Brahmi]
[Burmese]
[Cham]
[Chinese Characters]
[Chinese Pictograms]
[Coptic]
[Cuniform]
[Cyrillic]
[Etruscan]
[Georgian]
[Greek]
[Gujarati]
[Hebrew]
[Hindi]
[Japanese]
[Javanese]
[Kannada]
[Khmer]
[Korean]
[Lao]
[Latin (Roman and Modern)]
[Lepcha]
[Linear B]
[Malayalam]
[Maldivian]
[Mayan]
[Mongolian]
[Nastaliq]
[Oriya]
[Phoenician]
[Punjabi]
[Runic]
[Samaritan]
[Sanskrit]
[Sinhalese]
[Syriac]
[Tamil]
[Telugu]
[Thai]
[Tibetan]
[Tocharian]
[Ugarit]
[Readers' Feedback (Languages)]
Script samples from OmniGlot
|
The Cyrillic Alphabet
Russian
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Macedonian
Serbian
Mongolian
Old Church Slavonic
The Cyrillic alphabet has been influenced by both the Greek and Latin alphabets.
The original is called Old Church Slavonic.
It is used for several languages in Eastern Europe:
Russian, Ukrainian, Bulgarian, Serbian and Macedonian.
|
Support this web site by making a donation
|