![]() | The article's lead section may need to be rewritten.(April 2025) |
Between 1772 and 1815, the Russian Empire seized about four-fifths of Poland-Lithuania, where Polish was the leading official language. Polish remained the official language of the incorporated Polish-Lithuanian territories until the late 1830s. Later, it was fully replaced with Russian in the mid-1860s. A middle stage for the transition was the use of the Russian-style Cyrillic for writing Polish. [1]
Source: [2]
А а A a | Б б B b | В в W w | Г г G g | Д д D d | Е е Ie ie | Ё ё Io io | Ж ж Ż ż | З з Z z | И и I i | I i I i |
К к K k | Л л L l | М м M m | Н н N n | О о O o | О̂о̂ Ó ó | П п P p | Р р R r | Р̌р̌ Rz rz | С с S s | Т т T t |
У у U u | Ф ф F f | Х х Ch ch | Х̾ х̾ H h | Ц ц C c | Ч ч Cz cz | Ш ш Sz sz | Щ щ Szcz szcz | Ъ ъ - | Ы ы Y y | Ь ь - |
Э э E e | Ю ю Iu iu | Ю̂ю̂ Ió ió | Я я Ia ia | Й й J j | А̨ а̨ Ą ą | Я̨ я̨ Ią ią | Э̨ э̨ Ę ę | Е̨ е̨ Ię ię |
Source: [3]
Cyrillic script | Latin script |
---|---|
Поврôтъ Таты, пp̌езъ А. Мицкевича | Powrót Taty, przez A. Mickiewicza |