Writing a few Cyrillic letters which are not in use anymore. Some of them only appeared once in history, but they're just too funky not to be included in this video :)
multilocular O was only used one time in recorded history, in a 15th century old church Slavic phrase "серафими многоꙮ҄читїи҄ " meaning "many-eyed seraphim" I believe the invention and inclusion of the multilocular O was used to put emphasis on the fact that the seraphim mentioned had many eyes, or perhaps that the seraphim was so powerful that it altered the scripture as the writer was writing it to perhaps prove it's power? Strange, and a funny little snippet of Slavic history
Perun keeps blessing with every single current. I find the view that Peruns lighting defends the tree of life to be a great example of the ancestors being returned to the land of the living. Here in this chat, we share the discussion about a seldom seen letter almost lost in time. Perun lives, and so this letter is returned to the living. With the lighting in our phones; perhaps we can teach the computers about Perun....
Actually it’s funny you say that because that creepy multiocular O was only used in 1 circumstance: when describing many-eyed angels in Psalms. So technically yeah…biblically accurate angels in a letter
Fun fact, the Bible is about how God came to us to set us free from bad things, including death and separation from Him❤ Jesus resurrected on the 3rd day, and our hope lies in Him, because He justified every single person. All it takes is the want to be justified and faith in the fact that what He went through kn the cross sets us free; that He is Lord❤
@@aux.xá Fun fact; Praying for anything for yourself is using the Lord's name in vain, because that is vain. Another fun fact; hell isn't described in the bible, it's the underworld from norse mythology, but they added brimstone and left out the ice. Another fun thing; god either wants us to be in pain, or cannot be all powerful, since if he could change it and wanted to then there's literally nothing stopping him. There's no reason to suffer when the lesson can be preprogrammed when we are made, and painful birth defects are just his sense of humor I guess, since the devil isn't more powerful than god. A final fun fact; Lucifer, devils, the Devil, and the beast are all names for different things/guys, and 666 is what you get when you add up "Caesar Nero" in hebrew characters. Please read all of the Bible, not just the parts everyone talks about, and don't just glaze over the horrific parts. Humans are all pretty bad, but we're worse when we argue for no reason, and try to force our will on those who didn't ask.
The Cyrillic alphabet is just so fascinating. Just all of these crazy letters that were created by different people of languages to make their language fit into this alphabet, it's something not even the Latin script got.
@@maratkard also Ф. Though it is a direct rip-off of its Greek counterpart previously unused in Slavic languages even as a sound, unlike Xi, Psi, or Omega, it stayed because of its abundance in newer borrowed words
@@MinorLife10 ф - F, Д - D, Ж - Zje . I'm russian and symbols this video are very strange and crazy. I think there were before paper creation, cause ancient ancestors of Rus use brich tree for writing. Persia (Iran) were sailing first ~paper to Rus , that was our first market partner
@@AndreuAlphapibeTheMemer Church slavonic is a liturgical language which is the base of most slavic languages. It's now extinct. For example the basis of French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian etc. has come from Latin.
Actually not becauce of it. All hard conners would be softened and organically float to the another letter. Especially when you use them often, you get used for fast handwritting. For example: Ж - double K, this 5 stroks letter takes only 3 hand movements - reflected C, |, C - and it becomes Ж. The same thing with Д: handwriting versions is "g" or ^ plus bottom line, a bit longer, then ^ turns in some sort of tris with a long base. That's it. About letters in the current video: some of them represented sounds which are dropped out from language by 18 centuary, some cuz used in only few prayers as greek words, and maybe something else... Anyway write them nowadays would be no harder/faster then chinese chars during an intense lecture Ꙉ(-Ꙩ-ω-Ꙩ-)Ѩ
@@Rodrigougarte-g8j "it was church usage?" These stylish glyphs are not everpresent, the multiocular o is only present in one manuscript that I am aware of, do you have any sources for its multiple use?
Hey, Russian here! Some of letters here are still using some of letters from old cyrillic but only in Ortodox bible which is written in church slavonic! (for example some of letters which are based on greek language, or such letters like yus or uk)
@@verandi3882 I have a serbian latin keyboard so i can't show it to you, but it makes its original sound of something like a soft english J (like in June) or DU in dune. Its latin equivalent is Đ (đ).
Most of these letters are not lost, and those that are not in usage anymore, were present in ortographies in the past 100 years. The ocular glyphs were never used in writing apart from a couple of church manuscripts.
That looks like Glagolitic to me, which was the short lived version created by St Cyril and Methodius. Their students made the version that's widely used today. It's unlikely to see any of those letters in a modern script
Dze isn’t _actually_ lost, it’s just changed its _design_ . In Macedonia, there is a dze, but it doesn’t look like Ꙃꙃ, it looks like *Ѕѕ* . Also, in Abkhazia there is a dze and it looks like *Ӡӡ* . Hope you learned something! Love to all.
Dzelo is only A Dze if Dze got Dzwe. It just looked like Ꚃꚃ. Or Dzelo looked like Ꙃꙃ or Abkhaz letters have a Dze looked like Ӡӡ. But Ӡӡ looked like latin Ezh Macedonian Dze looked like Ѕѕ. Did you get catrinity font? Have chocolates for you!
@@jajmagoo1548 It'd be nice to have ð again too, since the th in "This" is technically a different sound than þ. Although it seems just using þ for both was common historically in English
О да, старые бета, альва и прото версии кирилицы. Это были лихие времена, изобретали символы как могли и из чего могли. Кирил и Мефодий отрывались как в прследний раз.
@@mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072 Cyrill and Methodius were tasked to invent a writing system for the Slavs by the Byzantine Emperor of the time. They invented the Cyrillic alphabet after studying the Slavic/Slavonic language for years. They were both greek and the greek language was then the most widely used in the Byzantine Empire, so the cyrillic alphabet shares wide similarities with the greek one
1. Arrow 2. 3K 3. Z with Style 4. O with two dots on the upper part and lower part 5. An eye 6. Two eyes 7. Cute face 8. Ten eyed monster 9. PK 10. Half X half O with a small hook 11. Smiley face with deformed smile 12. A+Y+[ 13. RE 14. Trident 15. The sea logo 16. Evil 3 with Fashion (ksi) 17. I€
The funny thing in typography is that someone will always think of something else once they see your handwriting and/or calligraphy. And that is when your font or alphabet system becomes well-known, via memes or just usage.
Greetings from Bulgaria 🇧🇬🌿 Love your channel, I found it when searching how to hqndwrite the Arab letters,coz I'm trying to learn some,just for the fun,I know I can't do it on my own, yet I need to learn how to write them by hand. It's a hobby of mine learning foreign languages.
If you really want to know, it's a very specific variant of Ot used for a poetic exclamation which would sound something like the "Oh!" in English. It's also straight up stolen from Greek.
The letters are beautiful, but clearly from another age when the ability to read and write was not a baseline requirement for everyone but a special skill reserved for people deemed worthy. You can clearly see why they won’t work in a day to day setting, being cumbersome to write in a hurry. They are really meant only for things like religious scripture, in a same way Arabic Islamic calligraphy is.
multilocular O was only used one time in recorded history, in a 15th century old church Slavic phrase "серафими многоꙮ҄читїи҄ " meaning "many-eyed seraphim"
I believe the invention and inclusion of the multilocular O was used to put emphasis on the fact that the seraphim mentioned had many eyes, or perhaps that the seraphim was so powerful that it altered the scripture as the writer was writing it to perhaps prove it's power? Strange, and a funny little snippet of Slavic history
Besides the weird O it looks very like modern Russian
So by function and appearance, it is more like emoji, really?
Samael?
Can you tell me why there's exist a code for this specific letter that used only once in entire human history?
Blessing of Perun?
Perun keeps blessing with every single current. I find the view that Peruns lighting defends the tree of life to be a great example of the ancestors being returned to the land of the living.
Here in this chat, we share the discussion about a seldom seen letter almost lost in time. Perun lives, and so this letter is returned to the living.
With the lighting in our phones; perhaps we can teach the computers about Perun....
As a slavic person myself I was like
"OH! We have tha-... What the fuck?" every time
+
Smaller yus is an ancestor of Я
And the small one for У, at least in russian - pretty possible that others languags phonetic shift was different@@Неототалист
It's good that we don't use these letters anymore. Otherwise, each letter would have to be drawn for several minutes
@@DIOS-Mespecially that grape shaped letter
multilocular o be like
👁️👁️👁️
👁️👁️👁️👁️
👁️👁️👁️
This is literally what this letter means. It was only used in one phrase "серафимимн҆оꙮ҆читїи҆" [many-eyed Seraphim].
"Be not afraid, human"
ꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮꙮ
multiocular o
Ophanim be like:
Biblically accurate Cyrillic alphabet
Actually it’s funny you say that because that creepy multiocular O was only used in 1 circumstance: when describing many-eyed angels in Psalms. So technically yeah…biblically accurate angels in a letter
Fun fact, the Bible is about how God came to us to set us free from bad things, including death and separation from Him❤ Jesus resurrected on the 3rd day, and our hope lies in Him, because He justified every single person. All it takes is the want to be justified and faith in the fact that what He went through kn the cross sets us free; that He is Lord❤
@@aux.xá
Fun fact; Praying for anything for yourself is using the Lord's name in vain, because that is vain.
Another fun fact; hell isn't described in the bible, it's the underworld from norse mythology, but they added brimstone and left out the ice.
Another fun thing; god either wants us to be in pain, or cannot be all powerful, since if he could change it and wanted to then there's literally nothing stopping him. There's no reason to suffer when the lesson can be preprogrammed when we are made, and painful birth defects are just his sense of humor I guess, since the devil isn't more powerful than god.
A final fun fact; Lucifer, devils, the Devil, and the beast are all names for different things/guys, and 666 is what you get when you add up "Caesar Nero" in hebrew characters.
Please read all of the Bible, not just the parts everyone talks about, and don't just glaze over the horrific parts. Humans are all pretty bad, but we're worse when we argue for no reason, and try to force our will on those who didn't ask.
@@aux.xáoh shut up. This has nothing to do with this. Go preach your religion elsewhere
@@thetobyntr9540 Norse mythology mentioned? Ragnarök fr fr
The Cyrillic alphabet is just so fascinating.
Just all of these crazy letters that were created by different people of languages to make their language fit into this alphabet, it's something not even the Latin script got.
And some of the crazy letters are still in use: Д Ж
Well, nothing could compare to multi monocular O
@@maratkard also Ф. Though it is a direct rip-off of its Greek counterpart previously unused in Slavic languages even as a sound, unlike Xi, Psi, or Omega, it stayed because of its abundance in newer borrowed words
@@MinorLife10 ф - F, Д - D, Ж - Zje . I'm russian and symbols this video are very strange and crazy.
I think there were before paper creation, cause ancient ancestors of Rus use brich tree for writing.
Persia (Iran) were sailing first ~paper to Rus , that was our first market partner
Well english had þ but we got rid of þat for some reason
St Cyril made the script for the Slavic languages so they could have books in their own language that's why it looks mostly like the greek script
2:45 that just looks like Ю but someone took a bite from it
Was it you who broke my ju? Ѥ
bro like give it back man
Its looks like "Ю", but "Эээ..."
어 오 Ю
@@lIilIlIiIiIlllillliliiillii as a person who knows russian and learns korean, that is.. interesting to look at..
@@sqwdxx As a Korean learning Russian, I agree.
_"Beautiful Omega~"_
**DRAWS ASS WITH A TRAMP STAMP**
Well, Omega is the End, lol 😂
My mind immediately jumped into omegaverse.
Ωω are the capital and lowercase letters
@@achilleschristianplacibe1100fucking hell same here😂
WHAT THE FUCK?
No mom, I'm drawing the ancient Cyrillic double monocular o on this stick figure. Geez.
1:18 “be not afraid” ahh letter
Hahaha, funni part in brain go brrrr
2:58 Big yus looks like some sort of semi-anthropomorphic monster that hasn't got legs so he uses his arms to crawl
or maybe a headless guy peeing
Wait until you hear the sound it corresponds to 👀
@@tigormal its [ɔ̃] (a nasalized o-like sound)
really said 吊
@@shekeler -_-;
Fun fact: Most of the weird letters are not used in Russian, they are used in Church Slavonic.
What's Church Slavonic?
@@AndreuAlphapibeTheMemer Church slavonic is a liturgical language which is the base of most slavic languages. It's now extinct. For example the basis of French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian etc. has come from Latin.
actually no one of these letters are used in russian, maybe some similar varieties can be seen in other Slavic languages, but I'm not sure
I doubt it. Many of those sounds are non-existant in eastern slavic language (basis for slavonic). Only distant/western dialects like Pol/czecoslovak
EÐ DETECTED
kids creating new letters be like:
They are not creating them
IT'S A JOKE @@ronaldbeard1992
@@ronaldbeard1992yes they are
this reminds me of the ladder letters
These letters are actually real
why do i think the sound of the letter Ԙ is funny to me
Sounds like "yeah" xD
cus it is
yayyyy!!!
яе
Ԙ
3:32 this letter got me scared 💀
ѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾѾ
100th like
How
Edit: how
I think im just dirty minded 😭
ѿ
And nearly all of these look like an absolute pain to write by hand, no wonder they were abandoned
Actually not becauce of it. All hard conners would be softened and organically float to the another letter. Especially when you use them often, you get used for fast handwritting. For example: Ж - double K, this 5 stroks letter takes only 3 hand movements - reflected C, |, C - and it becomes Ж. The same thing with Д: handwriting versions is "g" or ^ plus bottom line, a bit longer, then ^ turns in some sort of tris with a long base.
That's it. About letters in the current video: some of them represented sounds which are dropped out from language by 18 centuary, some cuz used in only few prayers as greek words, and maybe something else... Anyway write them nowadays would be no harder/faster then chinese chars during an intense lecture Ꙉ(-Ꙩ-ω-Ꙩ-)Ѩ
"Big yus" is the funniest name for a letter i have ever heard
Ѫ
IKR, I always pronounce it like I'm saying 'BIG CHUNGUS'
@@gabrielmedina4733 This letter was used in Bulgarian before 1945.
@@HeroManNick132 was that the fact about Ѫ
@@gabrielmedina4733 Yes
I think I understand why Ot isn’t in the cryllic alphabet anymore....
I think the it is the video's fault because the letter Ꙍ is actually broad omega
Same reason as ꙮ, it was church usage because it was used to replace literal words
Oboꙮ = about
Ot Ѿ= from
@@Rodrigougarte-g8j "it was church usage?" These stylish glyphs are not everpresent, the multiocular o is only present in one manuscript that I am aware of, do you have any sources for its multiple use?
@@neurodermatitis research "old Church Slavonic"
@@ΕΛΕΝΗ-λ2δ The video doesn't show broad omega, it shows Ot and Beautiful Omega, also the letters aren't in cursive so no it isn't broad omega
I think a lot of these are ligatures that got mistaken for or turned into "letters" at some point.
Hey, Russian here! Some of letters here are still using some of letters from old cyrillic but only in Ortodox bible which is written in church slavonic! (for example some of letters which are based on greek language, or such letters like yus or uk)
1:18 biblical accurate Cyrillic letter
Specifically and as far as I remember exclusively used for "many-eyed seraphim", so you're not wrong.
You're correct in multiple ways
Saying it makes sense is a BIG understatement
1:18 "The O's are watching you."
Creepy
Oh crap, this will keep me awake at night
ꙮ
I also can type this ꙮ
0:48
It'd be fabulous if some languages still used these letters. They're just so beautiful and artsy
Except for the multicular o. It's really interesting but it'd take too much time to write.
Djerv still exists in serbian cyrillic in similar shape
@@giant_cIit what phoneme sound does it represent if you could give an example?
@@verandi3882 I have a serbian latin keyboard so i can't show it to you, but it makes its original sound of something like a soft english J (like in June) or DU in dune. Its latin equivalent is Đ (đ).
@@giant_cIit understood so like polish dź .
hvala .
Multiocular o really said: 🍇
Yeah LOL
no
@@Catnap_Official_Channel si
@@angelicart.6 no
@@Catnap_Official_Channel si
When my girl ask me if I want some Taco Bell I be like: Ѫ
2:31 Drawing Ksi
2:20 Drawing Theta/Fita
Drawing Cyrillic Letters in Unicode 0:01-4:43
серафими многоꙮ҄читїи҄
@@markokaftalli9222please stop, this is a meme chat, we say lol a lot.
0:59 Also known as "the unspeakable eldritch horror O."
Used in the phrase „many-eyed Seraphim” 👀
Biblically accurate O
4:20 just a regular G
No is Ԍԍ
In a Russian doctor's cursive handwriting these letters would still all look the same.
Cursive?!
@@honeythunder yes
biblically accurate cyrylic alphabet
I mean, most of the letters in this video mostly were used in Church texts.
2:20 NOT THE PEPSI LOGO-
For me it is a circle with a straight line Ѳ
For me it looks like an uncolored yin yang
For me it is a O with a wiggly line inside it
Looks like theta if they wanted to get groovy
For me it looks like the view from outside an airplane window
"Ivan, when can you have that report on my desk?" "Next January."
I'm a big fan of the cyrillic script. A few of the letters are direct descendants of greek letters. Good video
Double monocular o really went 👀
Or something else 🤫😶
Most of these letters are not lost, and those that are not in usage anymore, were present in ortographies in the past 100 years. The ocular glyphs were never used in writing apart from a couple of church manuscripts.
That looks like Glagolitic to me, which was the short lived version created by St Cyril and Methodius. Their students made the version that's widely used today.
It's unlikely to see any of those letters in a modern script
Ot called me dirty minded in 100000000 languages 3:39
Btw im kinda late
Gyatt
3:09 - That one alien squid thing on the Keypads in Keep Talking and Nobody Explodes
ѭ
Lost Cyrillic letters:
Weird z
Sanskrit
Eyeball
Boobs
Literal emoji
*TRYPOPHOBIA THE LETTER*
What was that used to spell? Eldritch summoning rights?
Some of they still used by Orthodox Church in old Church Slavonic, for prayers and other rituals. So yeah
0:10 a tongue split in four
Creative
No one fu@@ing cares
2:30 ksi should change his username to this XD
Angry 3
Idk why but im obsessed in that letter
As a Russian, I’m kind of happy that these letters are lost. We already have too many of them
Я предложил бы тебе отказаться от любых букв и любого алфавита, чтобы не насиловать свой мозг.
Dze isn’t _actually_ lost, it’s just changed its _design_ . In Macedonia, there is a dze, but it doesn’t look like Ꙃꙃ, it looks like *Ѕѕ* . Also, in Abkhazia there is a dze and it looks like *Ӡӡ* . Hope you learned something! Love to all.
Correct, most of them just changed shape basically or are represented by a digraph today. Thanks for your contribution! :)
omg i was wondering what Ss in macedonian keyboard was!! ty
Dzelo is only A Dze if Dze got Dzwe. It just looked like Ꚃꚃ. Or Dzelo looked like Ꙃꙃ or Abkhaz letters have a Dze looked like Ӡӡ. But Ӡӡ looked like latin Ezh Macedonian Dze looked like Ѕѕ.
Did you get catrinity font? Have chocolates for you!
@@joycehauser6710шат тне
Xwe is not a Cyrillic Letter
2:18 Did you know: Ψ Psi still exists in the Greek Alphabet
This isn't related but I want thorn back
That'd be cool 👍👍. And the "Long S".
*Þis isn't related, but i want þorn back.
@@jajmagoo1548 It'd be nice to have ð again too, since the th in "This" is technically a different sound than þ. Although it seems just using þ for both was common historically in English
Bro read the title
@@TenorCantusFirmuslong s shouldnt be brought back, who needs another way to write a lowercase s?
Bulgaria: And i made that personally (yes blame us for the alien letters we only used)
0:52 imagine writing an essay
I can digit them in Church Slavonic.
Multiocular O: hello I will appear in your calligraphy and trypophobia nightmares
2:01 “yae”
Me:YAEY
Me literally: Yae Miko?!
Binocular O really said: 🐽
О да, старые бета, альва и прото версии кирилицы. Это были лихие времена, изобретали символы как могли и из чего могли. Кирил и Мефодий отрывались как в прследний раз.
Church Slavonic still used in many Orthodox Churches
"Please wrlcome to the stageeeee BIIIGGG YUSSSSSSS"
0:50 cartoons eye
Double Monocular O be like:👀
I was thinking something else 😏
I saw something else ;-;
@@deletdis6173💀
2:19 It's a Greek letter
Cyrillic alphabet is based on Greek.
@@minskghoul?
@@mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072Greece created Cyrillic alfabet
@@mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072 it has came from greek scripts
@@mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072 Cyrill and Methodius were tasked to invent a writing system for the Slavs by the Byzantine Emperor of the time. They invented the Cyrillic alphabet after studying the Slavic/Slavonic language for years. They were both greek and the greek language was then the most widely used in the Byzantine Empire, so the cyrillic alphabet shares wide similarities with the greek one
Ksi has his own letter? 2:29
All of them are wonderful, thx for this vid. 100%
1. Arrow
2. 3K
3. Z with Style
4. O with two dots on the upper part and lower part
5. An eye
6. Two eyes
7. Cute face
8. Ten eyed monster
9. PK
10. Half X half O with a small hook
11. Smiley face with deformed smile
12. A+Y+[
13. RE
14. Trident
15. The sea logo
16. Evil 3 with Fashion (ksi)
17. I€
Fr I always hate doing paperwork with mfers who got too many Multiocular Os in their name.
I love Cyrillic! T learns about more letters and stuff. I get educated in this platfrom for me. 😊
Y? 0:03
ZhhZ 0:13
1:30 Ku
What?!
what the hell were bulgarians thinking while making these
You know about I-A I-A is the oldest version of the modern Russian letter Я
Я actually comes from Ѧ
Я is not a Russian letter
@@goodboi6540it is imbecile
Are u sure bout that @@goodboi6540
The funny thing in typography is that someone will always think of something else once they see your handwriting and/or calligraphy.
And that is when your font or alphabet system becomes well-known, via memes or just usage.
Yoooo when is little yus dropping his album?
I remember finding out about them several years ago and getting very intrigued.
Hello. Some of these Cyrillic letters look interesting.
Hey wait a second, I recognize some of these from Keep Talking And Nobody Explodes
1:53 Dche looks like a combination of Ч and Д
It even sounds like a mix of these two letters. Saying this as russian.
@@wus3093 same thing here in Bulgarian
@@Athenaa13 same alphabet (cyrillic) + related nationality (we are slavs) = nearly identical alphabet, grammar and sounds
Everything aside....I absolutely love that pen. The way it writes makes me so happy for some reason
The double monocular o looks like eyes 👀 0:41
This is so strangely calming to watch
Djerv really said 🪦
1:36 ITS THE
UK😂
Looks like an angry cyclops
This is literally me doodling weird symbols during math or history class to pass the time
4:28 what is that
Geh of ring
I Know! U+F3D3! Easy! :D
That's "Ge spilt my middle ring" and it's not in unicode
Sorry my account is back so "dad get phone on the fire"
This is a letter from the alphabet proposed in 1912 by Mstislav Kulayev for Bashkir. Ғ was accepted instead.
The yuses can be used for Interslavic cyrillic writing today, they correspond to the Latin letters ę/ję and ų/jų.
How could anyone design the multicular O and think "hm looks good I should add this to my writing"
Greetings from Bulgaria 🇧🇬🌿
Love your channel, I found it when searching how to hqndwrite the Arab letters,coz I'm trying to learn some,just for the fun,I know I can't do it on my own, yet I need to learn how to write them by hand. It's a hobby of mine learning foreign languages.
Ѫ this is not a letter. This is a spider
Не утеряно, в старославянской письменности в церковнославянских книгах до сих пор используется.
4:05 Djerv literally 🪦
What is the meaning of monocular? I have a weird burn mark of something like that on my feet. 😅 Just wonder
2:38 ksi😂
Questions:
1) Why is Psi doing here? Shouldn't it still being used by the Greeks?
2) Why is Komi Sje is in the shape of the letter G?
1. Yn Ꙟ
2. Zhwe Ꚅ
3. Dze Ꙃ
4. Broad On Ѻ
5. Monocular O Ꙩ
6. Double Monocular O Ꙭ
7. Binocular O Ꙫ
8. Multiocular O ꙮ
9. Rha Ԗ
10. Monograph Uk Ꙋ
11. Tswe Ꚏ
12. Dche Ԭ
13. Yae Ԙ
14. Psi Ѱ
15. Fita Ѳ
16. Ksi Ѯ
17. Loated E Ѥ
18. Big Yus Ѫ
19. Loated Big Yus Ѭ
20. Little Yus Ѧ
21. Loated Little Yus Ѩ
22. Broad Omega Ꙍ
23. Omega With Titlo Ѽ
24. Djerv Ꙉ
25. Koppa Ҁ
26. Komi Sje Ԍ
27. Ge Split By Middle Ring (letter no longer exists)
The thing that is church Slavonic 15th century (1403 - December 31, 1500)
3:49
WHAT DA HEL IS DAT
exactly what I thought
If you really want to know, it's a very specific variant of Ot used for a poetic exclamation which would sound something like the "Oh!" in English. It's also straight up stolen from Greek.
Dat ass
Two simetrical "C"s touching, a comma at the top of them, and a squiggly line at the top of the comma
@@skarryprankhunternerd. It's obviously a big juicy-
If spiders had a written language, I imagine it'd contain a lot of characters like these.
Kindly let us 4:00
Any explanation to their history or pronunciation?
4:14 just G
No is symboly
Why they hating on my G?
You can see how a lot of these characters evolved from the conjoining of runic and phonecian.
0:49 ummm...
Are u thinking what im thinking
The letters are beautiful, but clearly from another age when the ability to read and write was not a baseline requirement for everyone but a special skill reserved for people deemed worthy. You can clearly see why they won’t work in a day to day setting, being cumbersome to write in a hurry. They are really meant only for things like religious scripture, in a same way Arabic Islamic calligraphy is.
3:56 ayo what is that🤨
Its a gyatt 😢
@@Leo-me5yt NOOOOOOOOOO
Beautiful omega
@@412lop7 YÈEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEES
Double monocular O is basically 80085 in letter form.
Double Monocular O really said: 👀
LIST OF THE LOST CYRILLIC LETTERS:
0:00 - Yn - Ꙟ
0:07 - Zhwe - Ꚅ
0:19 - Dze - Ѕ/Ꙃ [it isn't actually lost]
0:26 - Broad On - Ѻ
0:35 - Monocular O - Ꙩ
0:41 - Double Monocular O - Ꙭ
0:51 - Binocular O - Ꙫ
0:59 - Multiocular O - ꙮ
1:21 - Rha - Ԗ
1:30 - Uk - Ꙋ/Оу
1:40 - Tswe - Ꚏ
1:50 - Dche - Ԭ
2:01 - Yae - Ԙ
2:12 - Psi - Ѱ [EXISTS IN GREEK]
2:20 - Fita - Ѳ
2:29 - Ksi - Ѯ [ALSO EXISTS IN GREEK]
2:39 - Iotated E - Ѥ
2:49 - Big Yus - Ѫ
2:59 - Iotated Big Yus - Ѭ
3:12 - Little Yus - Ѧ
3:20 - Iotated Little Yus - Ѩ
3:31 - Ot - Ѿ
3:44 - Beautiful Omega - Ѽ
3:58 - Djerv - Ꙉ
4:07 - Koppa - Ҁ
4:14 - Komi Sje - Ԍ
4:20 - Ge Split by Middle ring
No Ѯ doesnt exist in greek
𝗦𝗵𝘄𝗲 𝗵𝗮𝘀 𝗹𝗲𝗳𝘁 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗰𝗵𝗮𝘁
@@fortegreenthecat484 Ksi ACTUALLY exists in greek as Ξ ξ
@@ИринаПетрова-к1в a
Bro Ѯ Is Existed Into A Rip-off Of Greek
good that we dropped these, cursive would be a hell both for native speakers and even harder for foreigners
1:30 - 🇬🇧
Big yus was used in Bulgarian till 1945 like with yat - Ѣ. But these letters were replaced by А/Ъ or Е/Я.