The Language was called dumfries and was very commonly used within the slavic world
I think its cyrillic. I know it starts with a "C"
Cyrillic
The Cyrillic alphabet was developed in the 10th century so that the newly christened inhabitants of the First Bulgarian Empire could write religious texts in an alphabet much better suited for their Slavic language. The Greek language had far fewer sounds than the Slavic dialects of the time, thus the Greek alphabet could not properly accommodate a Slavic language. Later, when other Slavic peoples converted to Christianity, they adopted this new Slavic alphabet.
The Cyrillic alphabet originated in the first Bulgarian Empire, during the 10th Century. It was used to translate the Bible and other texts into the Slavic language.
The English Language uses the Roman Alphabet. Normally it is not noted when another language is written using the Roman Alphabet. Sometimes it is noted when referring to the Romanian Language. In Romania, the Roman Alphabet is used. In Moldavia, the Cyrillic Alphabet is used for the same language. Since all Western European Languages, except for Greek, use the Roman Alphabet, normally no one mentions it.
The name of the alphabet used in the English language is the Latin alphabet. It consists of 26 letters, including both uppercase (capital) and lowercase (small) letters.
There is no such language as Ourmukhi. If you are talking about the Gurmukhi alphabet, it's used to write the Punjabi language.
The Language was called dumfries and was very commonly used within the slavic world
They invented an alphabet for the Slavic language's.
The Cyrillic alphabet was developed in the 10th century so that the newly christened inhabitants of the First Bulgarian Empire could write religious texts in an alphabet much better suited for their Slavic language. The Greek language had far fewer sounds than the Slavic dialects of the time, thus the Greek alphabet could not properly accommodate a Slavic language. Later, when other Slavic peoples converted to Christianity, they adopted this new Slavic alphabet.
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.
The alphabet used by many Slavic languages, known as the Cyrillic alphabet, was invented by the brothers Cyril and Methodius. They were Byzantine Christian missionaries who created the alphabet in the 9th century to help in their efforts to spread Christianity among the Slavic-speaking people.
Cyrillic alphabet
Russian comes from the Cyrillic alphabet. Many modern day Slavic countries and languages uses the Cyrillic alphabet such as Ukrainian and Belorussian.
The Cyrillic alphabet originated in the first Bulgarian Empire, during the 10th Century. It was used to translate the Bible and other texts into the Slavic language.
Cyrillic alphabet is used to write and it is the base of many alphabets from Slavic and non Slavic origin. Nowadays it is also used for Computer Enconding.
The name of the Russian alphabet is Cyrillic.The script used for writing the Russian alphabet is a form of Cyrillic script, also called azbuka; it's derived from Ancient Greek; currently contains 33 characters.Other terms you might be seeking, since you asked what name WAS used;Bulgarian alphabetGlagolitic alphabet
Yes, Lithuanian is the the Balto-Slavic language family.
The most spoken Slavic language is Russia. Russian minorities in other Slavic states maintain their language too.