On Thu, 27 Sep 2001, John Hudson wrote:

> At 02:48 9/27/2001, Marco Cimarosti wrote:
> 
> >A lot of time ago, someone on this list mentioned a language, written in the
> >Cyrillic alphabet, which employed letter "Q", taken from the Latin alphabet.
> >
> >Which language is it?
> 
> Kurdish. The common Cyrillic orthography includes four Latin letterforms 
> that are, as far as I know, unique to Kurdish:
> 
>          U+0051, U+0071  Capital, Small Q
>          U+0057, U+077   Capital, Small W
> 
> John Hudson
> 
> Tiro Typeworks                www.tiro.com
> Vancouver, BC         [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 
> Type is something that you can pick up and hold in your hand.
>                                                    - Harry Carter
> 
> 
                                             Thursday, Septembe 27, 2001
Besides Kurdish, the section on tansliteration of non-Slavic languages
using Cyrillic the ALA-LC romanization tables (1997) shows Q used with
four other languages: Aisor, Chechen (the 1862 and 1908 orthographies but
not the 1938 one), Dargwa (Uslar) and Lak (1864 but not 1938). For Kurdish
Q seems also to have an alternative glyph that appears as "O" followed by
a vertical bar which is also used with Lezghian (Uslar).  

     Regards,
          Jim Agenbroad ( [EMAIL PROTECTED] )
     The above are purely personal opinions, not necessarily the official
views of any government or any agency of any.
Phone: 202 707-9612; Fax: 202 707-0955; US mail: I.T.S. Dev.Gp.4, Library
of Congress, 101 Independence Ave. SE, Washington, D.C. 20540-9334 U.S.A.  


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