Jump to content

Languages written in a Cyrillic alphabet

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 83.10.162.236 (talk) at 21:37, 16 December 2009 (Other languages). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

This is a list of languages that have been written in the Cyrillic alphabet at one time or another. See also early Cyrillic alphabet.

Distribution of the Cyrillic alphabet worldwide. The dark green shows the countries that use Cyrillic as the one main script; the lighter green those that use Cyrillic alongside another official script.

Indo-European languages

  • Romance languages
    • Romanian (up to the 19th century, and a different form of Cyrillic in Moldova from 1940–89 exclusively; now Cyrillic is used in Transnistria officially and in the rest of the country in everyday communication by some groups of people; see Moldovan alphabet)
    • Ladino in occasional Bulgarian Sephardic publications.

Languages of the Caucasus

(This group is not assumed to comprise genetically related subgroups.)

Sino-Tibetan languages

Chukotko-Kamchatkan languages

Mongolian languages

Tungusic languages

Turkic languages

  • Altay
  • Azerbaijani/Azeri (1939–91, exclusively in Cyrillic, since 1991 officially in Roman, but in reality in everyday communication Cyrillic is used alongside with Roman script)
  • Balkar
  • Bashkir
  • Chuvash
  • Crimean Tatar (1938–91)
  • Gagauz (1957-1990s, exclusively in Cyrillic, since 1990s officially in Roman, but in reality in everyday communication Cyrillic is used alongside with Roman script)
  • Kazakh
  • Karachay
  • Karakalpak (1940s–1990s)
  • Karaim language (20-th century)
  • Khakas
  • Kumyk
  • Kyrgyz
  • Nogai
  • Tatar (since 1939; also with Roman since 2000, although not officially in Russia)
  • Turkmen (1940–94 exclusively in Cyrillic, since 1994 officially in Roman, but in reality in everyday communication Cyrillic is used alongside with Roman script)
  • Tuvan
  • Uzbek (1941–98 exclusively in Cyrillic, since 1998 Cyrillic is used alongside with Roman script, which was prescribed as the "future" alphabet of Uzbek)
  • Yakut

Uralic languages

Eskimo-Aleut languages

Afro-Asiatic languages

Other languages

References


See also