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.
The Cyrillic alphabet is named after St. Cyril, a missionary from Byzantium. It was invented during the 10th Century, possibly by St. Kliment of Ohrid, to write the Old Church Slavonic language.
bulgarian
Cyrillic is named for St. Cyril, a 9th-century Greek missionary who helped spread Orthodoxy further into northeastern Europe. Cyril and others helped to create alphabets for the Slavic languages they encountered, using their own Greek alphabet as a starting point.
There was not a Roman alphabet. There was the Latin alphabet, which was the alphabet of the ancient Romans (they were Latins) and the other Latins. Modern western European languages have adapted and adopted the Latin alphabet. In English the only letters which do not come from the Latin alphabet are J, U and W.
It was created in the 9th century by Bulgarians.
The Cyrillic alphabet was developed in the 10th Century.
Cyrillic alphabet
The modern Russian alphabet is a variant of the Cyrillic alphabet and contains 33 letters.
The Cyrillic alphabet is derived from the Greek alphabet, with the addition of several characters from the Hebrew alphabet.
It is currently written with the Cyrillic alphabet.
English speaking people use the Roman Alphabet. Russian speaking people use the Cyrillic Alphabet. The A is the same. The B looks different.
No. It is based on the Greek alphabet.
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cyrillic
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.