Russian language takes the 8th position among the world most spoken language with 160,000,000 native speakers and what makes it the most geographically widespread language of Eurasia, the most widely spoken of the Slavic languages, and the largest native language in Europe. Theses days, with a gigantic leap in the development of international affairs of Russia with former USSR and UN countries, Russian is widely used outside Russia. Recent researches show that Russian is applied as a means of coding and storage of universal knowledge data base — over 60% of all world information is published in English and Russian languages. Over a quarter of the world's scientific literature is published in Russian and putting a stamp of a necessary accessory of world communications systems.
Russian Alphabet: Introduction. The Russian alphabet, also called Cyrillic, consists of thirty-three letters representing thirty-one sounds and two signs that have no phonetic value of their own. It is attributes to the Greek monks Cyril and Methodius, who came as missionaries to Christianize the Slavic countries and left their mark on the language as well. Modified forms of this alphabet are still in use today in countries other than Russia , including Bulgaria and some of new nations of the former Yugoslavia .
Approximately one-third of the Cyrillic alphabet consists of letters that are identical to the Roman alphabet, with a phonetic value that is either almost equal or similar. Another third of the letters, are recognizable to Westerners because of their Greek origin: п is the Greek pi, p is the Greek rho, and so forth. The final third consists of letters that were created to represent sounds in the Slavic languages that had no counterpart in the original Greek of the missionary monks. Some of these letters have Hebrew origin, such as the letter ш [sh].
А /a/ | Б /b/ | В /v/ | Г /g/ | Д /d/ | Е /je/ | Ё /jo/ | Ж /ʐ/ | З /z/ | И /i/ | Й /j/ |
К /k/ | Л /l/ | М /m/ | Н /n/ | О /o/ | П /p/ | Р /r/ | С /s/ | Т /t/ | У /u/ | Ф /f/ |
Х /x/ | Ц /ʦ/ | Ч /ʨ/ | Ш /ʂ/ | Щ /ɕː/ | Ъ /-/ | Ы [ɨ] | Ь /◌ʲ/ | Э /e/ | Ю /ju/ | Я /ja/ |
Although there are visual and phonetic similarities, almost no Russian letter is pronounced in quite the same way as its in English counterpart. Russian vowels are purer and more clear than English vowels, and, except for combinations with the consonant-glide Й, do not form diphthongs. Many Russian consonants form “hard” and “soft” pairs, which are not easy to represent in English. Consonants that are plosive in English (p, b, t, d) are not plosive in Russia , which makes their pronunciation for English speakers difficult. At last, the famous Russian fricatives Ш [sh], Ж [zh], Ч [ch], Щ [sh’], Ц [ts] pose challenges all their own.