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Scientific transliteration, variously called academic, linguistic, or scholarly transliteration, is an international system for transliteration of text from the Cyrillic to the Latin alphabet (romanization). This system is most often seen in linguistics publications on Slavic languages.
[edit] DetailsThe scientific transliteration system is roughly as phonemic as is the orthography of the language transliterated. The deviations are with щ, where the transliteration makes clear that two phonemes are involved, and џ, where it fails to represent the (monophonemic) affricate with a single letter. The transliteration system is based on the Croatian alphabet, in which each letter corresponds directly to a Cyrillic letter of the related Serbian language, and which was heavily based on the earlier Czech alphabet. It was codified in the 1898 Prussian Instructions for libraries, or Preußische Instruktionen (PI). It can also be used to romanize the early Glagolitic alphabet, which has a close correspondence to Cyrillic. Scientific transliteration is often adapted to serve as a phonetic alphabet.[1] Scientific transliteration was the basis for the ISO 9 transliteration standard. While linguistic transliteration tries to preserve the original language’s pronunciation to a certain degree, the latest version of the ISO standard (ISO 9:1995) has abandoned this concept which was still found in ISO/R 9-1968 and is now restricted to a universal 1:1 mapping of letters. It thus allows for unambiguous reverse transliteration into the original Cyrillic text and is language-independent. The previous official Soviet romanization system, GOST 16876-71, is also based on scientific transliteration, but using Latin h for Cyrillic х instead of Latin x; or ssh or sth for Cyrillic Щ and a number of other differences. Most countries using Cyrillic script now have adopted GOST 7.79 instead, which is not exactly equivalent to ISO 9 but close to it. Representing all of the necessary diacritics on computers requires Unicode, Latin-2, Latin-4, or Latin-7 encoding.
* Archaic letters † Church Slavonic Iotified A (IA) Letters in parentheses are older or alternate transliterations. Ukrainian and Belarusian apostrophe are not transcribed. Early Cyrillic letter koppa (Ҁ, ҁ) was used only for transliterating Greek, and for its numeric value, so it is omitted. ISO 9:1995 is provided for comparison. [edit] See also
[edit] Notes
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[edit] External links
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