Ukrainian bhasa

Ukrainian bhasa (Ukrainian: українська мова, transliteration: ukrajins'ka mova) ek Eastern slavic bhasa hae. Ii bhasa Indo-European ke family ke hae.

Ukrainian
українська мова ukrayins'ka mova
Spoken inUkraine
Total speakers35-37 million
Language familyIndo-European
  • Balto-Slavic
    • Slavic
      • East Slavic
        • Ukrainian
Writing systemCyrillic (Ukrainian alphabet)
Ukrainian Braille
Official status
Official language in
  •  Ukraine
  •  Transnistria (unrecognized de facto state)
Recognised minority language in
Regulated byNational Academy of Sciences of Ukraine: Institute for the Ukrainian Language, Ukrainian language-informatical fund, Potebnya Institute of Language Studies
Language codes
ISO 639-1uk
ISO 639-2ukr
ISO 639-3ukr
Linguasphere53-AAA-ed < 53-AAA-e
(varieties: 53-AAA-eda to 53-AAA-edq)
Percentage of people in Ukrainian regions who speak Ukrainian as their native language (for 2001)
Percentage of people in Ukrainian regions who speak Ukrainian as their native language (for 2001)
Ukrainian bhasa

Ukrainian duusra sab se jaada kaam me laae waala Slavic bhasa hae. Ii Ukraine ke official bhasa hae, jahaan pe 35 million log ii bhasa me baat kare hae. speakers in Ukraine. Dunia bhar me 50 million se jaada log ii bhasa me baat kare hae.

Ukrainian bhasa ke Cyrillic alphabet me likha jaae hae.


Alphabet

Ukrainian alphabet with transliteration and German transcription:

Capital letter(HTML-Entity)Small letter(HTML-Entity)Academic
transliteration
English
transcription
German
transcription
А (&#1040;)а (&#1072;)A aA aA a
Б (&#1041;)б (&#1073;)B bB bB b
В (&#1042;)в (&#1074;)V vV vW w
Г (&#1043;)г (&#1075;)H hH hH h
Ґ (&#1168;)ґ (&#1169;)G gG gG g
Д (&#1044;)д (&#1076;)D dD dD d
Е (&#1045;)е (&#1077;)E eE eE e
Є (&#1028;)є (&#1108;)Je jeYe yeJe je
Ж (&#1046;)ж (&#1078;)Ž žZh zhSch (Sh) sch (sh)
З (&#1047;)з (&#1079;)Z zZ zS s
И (&#1048;)и (&#1080;)Y yY yY y
І (&#1030;)і (&#1110;)I iI iI i
Ї (&#1031;)ї (&#1111;)Ji jiYi yiJi ji
Й (&#1049;)й (&#1081;)J j 1Y yJ j
К (&#1050;)к (&#1082;)K kK k (instead ks x)K k (instead ks x)
Л (&#1051;)л (&#1083;)L lL lL l
М (&#1052;)м (&#1084;)M mM mM m
Н (&#1053;)н (&#1085;)N nN nN n
О (&#1054;)о (&#1086;)O oO oO o
П (&#1055;)п (&#1087;)P pP pP p
Р (&#1056;)р (&#1088;)R rR rR r
С (&#1057;)с (&#1089;)S sS sS s (between vowels ss)
Т (&#1058;)т (&#1090;)T tT tT t
У (&#1059;)у (&#1091;)U uU uU u
Ф (&#1060;)ф (&#1092;)F fF fF f
Х (&#1061;)х (&#1093;)Ch chKh, khCh ch
Ц (&#1062;)ц (&#1094;)C cTs tsZ z
Ч (&#1063;)ч (&#1095;)Č čCh chTsch tsch
Ш (&#1064;)ш (&#1096;)Š šSh shSch sch
Щ (&#1065;)щ (&#1097;)Šč ščShch shchSchtsch schtsch (Stsch stsch)
Ь (&#1068;)ь (&#1100;)’ (apostrophe) before vowel j 2’ (apostrophe) before vowel y (Soft sign)(–) bzw. j
Ю (&#1070;)ю (&#1102;)Ju JuYu yuJu ju
Я (&#1071;)я (&#1103;)Ja jaYa yaJa ja
’ (apostrophe)3(–)(–)

Notes

1only before o
2only after consonants; a capital letter does not exist; the soft sign ь is not a letter representing a sound, but modifies the sound of the preceding letter, indicating palatalisation ('softening').
3an apostrophe (’) is used to mark de-palatalization of the preceding consonant.

References