Post AquB2Y5yzP2PLISzg0 by getimiskon@fedi.getimiskon.xyz
(DIR) More posts by getimiskon@fedi.getimiskon.xyz
(DIR) Post #AqeJCsFZOCkBE5e9WC by yura@udongein.xyz
2025-01-31T09:28:45.239676Z
2 likes, 1 repeats
Ukrainians talking that letter ї exist only in Ukrainian language are so naïve...:ablobcatgooglytrash:
(DIR) Post #AqealEFLoOocVuVmTI by monsieuricon@social.kernel.org
2025-01-31T13:50:17.628816Z
0 likes, 0 repeats
@yura I thought it was unique among Cyrillic alphabets?
(DIR) Post #AqealFM7ghpJxCghfM by yura@udongein.xyz
2025-01-31T18:01:38.606552Z
0 likes, 0 repeats
@monsieuricon if we talk about Cyrillic, yes. Ї can definitely be called unique.But honestly I don't see much difference between Cyrillic "Ї" and Latin "Ï". Same goes with other letters like "о" and "o", "а" and "a" and so on.I understand that there should be something important because we have even have different Unicode characters for them. But despite that almost anybody will see the difference between those symbols.
(DIR) Post #AqealGOznVidCP2Vma by lyyn@mastodon.ml
2025-01-31T21:32:19Z
0 likes, 0 repeats
@yura @monsieuricon I saw instances of it in a different language in Serbia. It's called Rusyn languagehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rusyn_language
(DIR) Post #Aqeb2a2643YP0OaOCO by lyyn@mastodon.ml
2025-01-31T21:35:30Z
0 likes, 0 repeats
@yura @monsieuricon I guess sometimes it is considered a dialect of Ukranian
(DIR) Post #AquB2Y5yzP2PLISzg0 by getimiskon@fedi.getimiskon.xyz
2025-02-08T09:25:22.530652Z
0 likes, 0 repeats
@yura Ϊ :neocat_googly_woozy:
(DIR) Post #AquB2YmWRF47TEMxyy by getimiskon@fedi.getimiskon.xyz
2025-02-08T09:27:57.349795Z
0 likes, 0 repeats
@yura i just realize when switching to greek, i can use the key for the ¨ thingies and then switch to english in order to type the word "naïve". Thanks X11.
(DIR) Post #AquB2ZRHzffvVfRWWe by iska@catposter.club
2025-02-08T09:28:42.009Z
0 likes, 0 repeats
@getimiskon@fedi.getimiskon.xyz @yura@udongein.xyz just make a custom keymap? those are pretty easy to make iirc