Koler in Cyrillic is spelled as Колер.
"Russian" in Cyrillic is spelled as "русский".
In Cyrillic, "thank you" is spelled "спасибо".
Please in Russian Cyrillic is пожалуйста.
I'm not a native Russian speaker but here's my best guess: iacon although you'll need the Cyrillic i (looks like a backwards N => и). Why "iacon"? We'll, consider Josef Stalin's name. It was "iosef" with Cyrillic characters for the i (и) and f. In Cyrillic the 's' looks like the 'c' of the Latin alphabet. Hence, Jason => иacon It's actually: Джейсон. The combination of the first 4 Cyrillic letters is pronounced the same as the English J
The three main Cyrillic languages are Russian, Bulgarian, and Serbian. Each language has its own unique alphabet based on the Cyrillic script.
"Russian" in Cyrillic is spelled as "русский".
In Cyrillic, "borzoi" is spelled борзой.
The name Kristin can be transliterated to the Latinized form of Ukrainian Cyrillic. 'KPiCTiHA' would be its Ukrainian Cyrillic form.
The proper given name is spelled Cyric.(The Russian alphabet is Cyrillic.)
The anglicized spelling (from Cyrillic) is Sarajevo, the capital and largest city of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
As in, romanized? The Russian word is друг, or drug, pronounced "drook."
First, Volkswagen is a German car manufacturer. We spell it like Folkswaagn, or in cyrillic letters Фолксваген.
If you are looking for the Russian word for NEW, it is spelled novoe, which looks like НОВОЕ when written in the Russian cyrillic alphabet.
I'm not a native Russian speaker but here's my best guess: iacon although you'll need the Cyrillic i (looks like a backwards N => и). Why "iacon"? We'll, consider Josef Stalin's name. It was "iosef" with Cyrillic characters for the i (и) and f. In Cyrillic the 's' looks like the 'c' of the Latin alphabet. Hence, Jason => иacon It's actually: Джейсон. The combination of the first 4 Cyrillic letters is pronounced the same as the English J
The Cyrillic alphabet was developed in the 10th Century.
The Cyrillic alphabet is the alphabet used by Russian-speakers and a few other languages in the Slavic language family. It is made up of Greek and Hebrew characters and is used to spell out Russian (and other Slavic) words phonetically. It was created by Greek missionaries when they traveled to Russia.
Because of the transliteration from Cyrillic, the plural czars is also spelled tzars or more properly tsars, when it applies to the Russian hereditary rulers.