User:40bus/Cyrillic alphabets/Polish style

Komi-Permyak
The Komi-Permyak alphabet:

Mari alphabets
Meadow Mari alphabet:

Hill Mari alphabet

Kurdish
Kurds in the former Soviet Union use a Cyrillic alphabet:

Ossetian
The Ossetic language has officially used the Cyrillic script since 1937.

Tajik
The Tajik language is written using a Cyrillic-based alphabet.

Overview
This table contains all the characters used.

Һһ is shown twice as it appears at two different locations in Buryat and Kalmyk

Khalkha

 * W w =
 * Е е = ,
 * Ё ё =
 * Ż ż =
 * Z z =
 * Ij ij =
 * J j= the second element of closing diphthongs (aj, oj, etc.) and long (ij), it never indicates /j/ in native words
 * N n = ,
 * Ö ö =
 * U u =
 * Ü ü =
 * Y y= (in suffixes after a hard consonant)

Long vowels are indicated with double letters. The Polish letters Kk, Pp and Ff are not used in native Mongolian words, but only for Russian or other loans (Pp may occur in native onomatopoeic words).

Buryat
The Buryat (Burjad) Polish script is similar to the Khalkha above, but Ьь indicates palatalization as in Russian. Buryat does not use Ww, Kk, Pp, Ff, Cc, or Czcz in its native words (Pp may occur in native onomatopoeic words).


 * E e = ,
 * Ż ż =
 * J j = the second element of closing diphthongs (aj, oj, etc.), it never indicates /j/ in native words
 * N n = ,
 * Öö öö =, ö does not occur in short form in literary Buryat based on the Khori dialect
 * U u =
 * Ü ü =
 * X x =
 * H h =
 * Y y = ,

Kalmyk
The Kalmyk (хальмг) Cyrillic script differs from Khalkha in some respects: there are additional letters (Әә, Җҗ, Ңң), letters Ээ, Юю and Яя appear only word-initially, long vowels are written double in the first syllable (нөөрин), but single in syllables after the first. Short vowels are omitted altogether in syllables after the first syllable (хальмг = ). Жж and Пп are used in loanwords only (Russian, Tibetan, etc.), but Пп may occur in native onomatopoeic words.


 * Ә ә =
 * В в =
 * Һ һ =
 * Е е = ,
 * Җ җ =
 * Ң ң =
 * Ө ө =
 * У у =
 * Ү ү =

Kazakh
Kazakh can be alternatively written in the Latin alphabet. Latin is going to be the only used alphabet in 2022, alongside the modified Arabic alphabet (in the People's Republic of China, Iran and Afghanistan).


 * Ä ä =
 * Gh gh = (voiced uvular fricative)
 * Е е =
 * I i =
 * Q q = (voiceless uvular plosive)
 * Ng ng =
 * O o =
 * Ö ö =
 * Ł ł =, ,
 * U u =
 * Ü ü =
 * H h =
 * Y y =

The Polish letters Ww, Cc and Czcz  are not used in native Kazakh words, but only for Russian loans.