Draft:Anglo-Cyrillic

The Anglo-Cyrillic (Anglo-Cyrillic: Аҥло-Сѣриллик) or Anglo-Slavonic (Anglo-Cyrillic: Аҥло-Славоник) is the variant of the Cyrillic alphabet that has been developed specifically to write the English language. English is traditionally written with the Latin script, but Anglo-Cyrillic was developed for usage in the Orthodox and Eastern Catholic churches, where Church Slavonic, which uses the Cyrillic script, is commonly used as a liturgical language.

Names
The name "Anglo-Cyrillic" is a combination of the prefix "Anglo-" which derives from "Anglus", Latin for "English", and Cyrillic. When the first Anglo-Cyrillic charts were printed, they had the heading "Anglo-Slavonic", because the script was made so people could learn Church Slavonic faster. "Anglo-Slavonic" is preffered over "Anglo-Cyrillic", however. Also, Anglo-Cyrillic is called Anglo-Slavonic as the script is based upon the Early Cyrillic script, as it has more sounds.

History
In September 2023, Justin Winch Justiniano (Anglo-Cyrillic: Џустин Ўинч Џустињано), thought of transcribing the English language into Cyrillic, so that it would be easy for the clergy and parishioners of his Byzantine Catholic church to learn Church Slavonic, even if the words were romanized.

He asked his history teacher, Daniel Maurer, to print out copies of the script, which he made on Microsoft Word. He gave it out to students, so they could learn the script.

In order to depict letters in the alphabet not used in current languages that use Cyrillic, the student took letters from the Early Cyrillic script, and others from the Aleut Cyrillic script.

Letters
The letters are directly transliterated from the Latin alphabet, not phonetically transcribed, like in Russian transliterations of English words. For example, the word "squeak" might be transliterated into Russian Cyrillic as "скуик", but in Anglo-Cyrillic, it would be written as "сԟуеак".

There are also three iotated letters, or ligatures for words in Anglo-Cyrillic: These are the letters used in daily writing. There is actually a rule in Anglo-Cyrillic in which all words, usually names, from languages traditionally written in Cyrillic, are to be written in the way they are written in that language, even if some of the letters are not in the Anglo-Cyrillic alphabet. For example, the name Pyotr is written as "Пётр" in Russian, while if the Anglo-Cyrillic rules are used, it would be written as "Пѣотр". The Russian spelling is used regardless.