In Cyrillic, "thank you" is spelled "спасибо".
Thank you = Diakuiu Thank you very much = Duzhe diakuiu The above is the transliteration from the cyrillic letters. In cyrillic it is like this: Thank you = дякую Thank you very much = дуже дякую The transliteration table I used I found here (bottom of page): http://www.ukrweekly.com/old/archive/1996/429612.shtml
Please in Russian Cyrillic is пожалуйста.
"Russian" in Cyrillic is spelled as "русский".
'Please' in Russian Cyrillic alphabet is written as "пожалуйста".
The modern Russian alphabet is a variant of the Cyrillic alphabet and contains 33 letters.
Спасибо.
Thank you = Diakuiu Thank you very much = Duzhe diakuiu The above is the transliteration from the cyrillic letters. In cyrillic it is like this: Thank you = дякую Thank you very much = дуже дякую The transliteration table I used I found here (bottom of page): http://www.ukrweekly.com/old/archive/1996/429612.shtml
hvala bogu. Here it is in cyrillic writing> слава богу Слава богу - slAHvah BOgu.
The Cyrillic alphabet was developed in the 10th Century.
cyrillic ... The two monks were two brothers from Thessaloniki, Cyril and Methodius, missionaries for the Orthodox Church, later canonized and given the epithet isapostolos (iso-apostole :equal to the apostoles).
Sorry, but you've been tricked. There is no such thing as cyrillic acid.
bulgarian
English speaking people use the Roman Alphabet. Russian speaking people use the Cyrillic Alphabet. The A is the same. The B looks different.
The modern Russian alphabet is a variant of the Cyrillic alphabet and contains 33 letters.
The countries of the former Soviet Union use 5 different alphabets: Latin, Cyrillic, Arabic (mostly the Persian variety), Georgian, and Armenian.Here is a list of Post-Soviet states and their current alphabets:Armenia - ArmenianAzerbaijan - Latin, Cyrillic, and ArabicBelarus - CyrillicEstonia - LatinGeorgia - GeorgianKazakhstan - Cyrillic, ArabicKyrgyzstan - Cyrillic, ArabicLatvia - LatinLithuania - LatinMoldova - Latin, CyrillicRussia - CyrillicTajikistan - Cyrillic (plans to switch to Arabic in the future)Turkmenistan - Latin, CyrillicUkraine - CyrillicUzbekistan - Latin, Cyrillic
There is no exact date when the Cyrillic alphabet was first established. Ancient records written in Cyrillic date back to the late 9th century, meaning the language was established around this time period.
cyrillic