Wikipedia:Naming conventions (Cyrillic)

This page documents the current usage of names in the Cyrillic script, and transliteration of those names in Wikipedia. This is not a recommendation. Discuss proposed recommendations at Wikipedia talk:Naming conventions (Cyrillic).

Languages covered: Belarusian, Bulgarian, Macedonian, Mongolian, Montenegrin, Russian, Serbian, Ukrainian.

There are many more languages which use the Cyrillic alphabet.

Usage

 * 1) If a name or word has a conventional English spelling, that is used (see, below)
 * 2) In linguistics topics, scholarly transliteration is used.
 * 3) Otherwise, the conventional transliteration method for a language is used (see below)
 * 4) Generally, Cyrillic is provided only where transliteration alone cannot convey the original spelling.  Since many of the conventional systems are non-deterministic, this means that very often both the Cyrillic and transliteration are provided in a word's first occurrence in an article.

Belarusian
For Belarusian:
 * 1) The BGN/PCGN for Belarusian language system (1979) is to be used.
 * 2) The renderings of the Belarusian geographical names in the national Instruction on transliteration of Belarusian geographical names with letters of Latin script (recommended for use by the Working Group on Romanization Systems of the United Nations Group of Experts on Geographical Names, UNGEGN ) may be additionally included, if sufficiently different from the BGN/PCGN version. The suggested form of writing it down, in absence of template would be: ...(BelarusianGeoNameBGNed, IOT2000: BelarusianGeoNameIOT2000ed)...
 * 3) Other systems and orthographies, e.g., ISO 9, GOST 1983 and derivatives, Lacinka are not to be used. See also Romanization of Belarusian, Łacinka alphabet

Bulgarian
For Bulgarian:
 * 1) The official Streamlined System for the Romanization of Bulgarian is preferred. See also #Alphabet.

Kazakh
For Kazakh language, BGN/PCGN romanization of Kazakh is typically used.

Macedonian
For Macedonian:
 * 1) There are competing transcription systems. May be written as using Serbian Latin spelling, with
 * 2) dz for ѕ
 * 3) kj or ć for ќ
 * 4) gj or đ for ѓ.

The Unicode digraph glyphs for consonants dz, dž, lj and nj are normally not used, they are commonly written as d+z, etc.

See also: Romanization of Macedonian

Mongolian
For Mongolian:
 * 1) Mongolian is transliterated using a modified BGN/PCGN system; details at Naming conventions (Mongolian).

Montenegrin
For Montenegrin:
 * 1) Montenegrin Latin spelling is used.

Russian
For Russian:
 * 1) Russian is transliterated using a modified version of the BGN/PCGN romanization of Russian; details at Romanization of Russian.

See also Russian alphabet, Romanization of Russian

Rusyn
See Romanization of Rusyn.

Serbian
For Serbian:
 * 1) Serbian Latin spelling is used. See also #Alphabets, Gaj's Latin alphabet, romanization of Serbian. Biographies usually use the term "Serbian Cyrillic" since the Latin alphabet is also Serbian. Example from Aleksandar Vučić:

The consonant đ may sometimes appear as dj in some sources, but the preferred spelling is đ. The purpose of spelling this consonant đ is to avoid confusion over the varying roles of the sound 'j' in the Serbian language.

The Unicode digraph glyphs for consonants dž, lj and nj are normally not used, they are commonly written as d+ž, etc.

Ukrainian
Ukrainian is transliterated using the Ukrainian National system of 2010. See also:


 * Ukrainian alphabet
 * Romanization of Ukrainian

Example:

Other languages

 * Old Church Slavonic: scientific transliteration would be appropriate in articles about this extinct language
 * Modern Church Slavonic
 * Non-Slavic languages: choose a relevant standard used in recent reliable sources on the subject. Some collections of romanization systems:
 * ALA-LC Romanization Tables, specifically the romanization for Non-Slavic Languages (in Cyrillic Script PDF
 * BGN/PCGN romanization systems
 * UNGEGN Working Group on Romanization Systems

See also Romanization of Kyrgyz.

Conventional names
When a conventional name in English exists, use that name even if the spelling differs from the transliteration. Commonly used names in the English language may stem from various sources: Diacritics may be used in the romanization of Cyrillic languages:
 * They may be anglicized versions, e.g., Mykola→Nicholas, Iosif→Joseph, Srbiya→Serbia.
 * They may be transliterated by a different system, or from another language, e.g., Rus→Rus’, Chaykovskiy→Tchaikovsky.
 * They may be simplified, more familiar-looking, or easier to pronounce for English-speakers, e.g., Gorbachyov→Gorbachev, Iuliya→Yulia, Khrushchyov→Khruschev, Yuriy→Yuri.
 * They may be names or loanwords from a third language, e.g., Petergof→Peterhof.
 * They may be Latin transliterations, e.g., Đere rather than Djere, Miloš instead of Milos.

Formatting references
There is no recommendation about how to cite Cyrillic bibliographic information. Most Cyrillic materials in libraries of the English-speaking world are catalogued in Library of Congress transliteration. If a reference has an ISBN, then it is easy for a reader to look it up.

General info: Citing sources.