The alphabet was named after the person who made it, "Cyrillic Alphabet"
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.
The Language was called dumfries and was very commonly used within the slavic world
Russian comes from the Cyrillic alphabet. Many modern day Slavic countries and languages uses the Cyrillic alphabet such as Ukrainian and Belorussian.
The majority of languages in the world with an alphabet are based on the Latin alphabet. Virtually all of the countries of North America, South America, Australia, and Western Europe use the Latin Alphabet. A Notable exception is Greece, which uses the Greek alphabet.
The Roman alphabet is used for writing many languages. Many of them are in all other important respects unrelated, and there is no generic term for them.
Romanian is the European Romance language that contains many Slavic words due to its historical interactions with neighboring Slavic-speaking populations.
The Language was called dumfries and was very commonly used within the slavic world
Russian comes from the Cyrillic alphabet. Many modern day Slavic countries and languages uses the Cyrillic alphabet such as Ukrainian and Belorussian.
The Russian language originated from the early Proto-Slavic language, just like all the other Slavic languages (Ukrainian, Polish, Czech, Serbian, Bulgarian and so on), so in a sense they are all "dialects" from that prehistorical language. With time, the "dialects" changed so much that they are now considered different languages. During history, Russian also borrowed many words from other languages like Greek, German, French, and English. Of course, those languages in turn borrowed from other languages, just like all languages borrow from each other.
They are both Slavic languages, having developed from Proto-Slavic and Proto-Balto-Slavic. They are cousin languages, and are part of groups that include many other languages from the same area.
The Ukrainian is a cyrillic alphabet, not latin, so it is similar to other Eastern Slavic alphabets (including Russian). While many letters are similar, most slavic languages have letters that are unique to their alphabets. The Russian alphabet includes such letters as Ё, Ъ, Ы, Э, the Ukranian one doesn't include these letters. On the other hand, Ukranian alphabet includes such letters as I, Ґ, Є, Ї, the Russian one doesn't.
All languages have numbers, and most languages of the world use an alphabet. There are too many to list.
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.
All languages that use the Latin alphabet have the letter A, which is more than 1000 languages. There is also a very similar looking letter in both the Cyrillic alphabet and the Greek alphabet.
The Roman alphabet is used for writing many languages. Many of them are in all other important respects unrelated, and there is no generic term for them.
"Drozd" is a last name of Polish origin. It is a common surname in Poland and is derived from the Polish word for a thrush bird.
The majority of languages in the world with an alphabet are based on the Latin alphabet. Virtually all of the countries of North America, South America, Australia, and Western Europe use the Latin Alphabet. A Notable exception is Greece, which uses the Greek alphabet.
There are 26 letters in the alphabet in Uganda.(The official languages of Uganda are English and Swahili).