ブルガリアアルファベット
-
А0410
-
а0430
-
Б0411
-
б0431
-
В0412
-
в0432
-
Г0413
-
г0433
-
Д0414
-
д0434
-
Е0415
-
е0435
-
Ж0416
-
ж0436
-
З0417
-
з0437
-
И0418
-
и0438
-
Й0419
-
й0439
-
К041A
-
к043A
-
Л041B
-
л043B
-
М041C
-
м043C
-
Н041D
-
н043D
-
О041E
-
о043E
-
П041F
-
п043F
-
Р0420
-
р0440
-
С0421
-
с0441
-
Т0422
-
т0442
-
У0423
-
у0443
-
Ф0424
-
ф0444
-
Х0425
-
х0445
-
Ц0426
-
ц0446
-
Ч0427
-
ч0447
-
Ш0428
-
ш0448
-
Щ0429
-
щ0449
-
Ъ042A
-
ъ044A
-
Ь042C
-
ь044C
-
Ю042E
-
ю044E
-
Я042F
-
я044F
説明
The Bulgarian alphabet contains 30 Cyrillic letters. Compared to Russian, it lacks Ы , Э , Ё . And some letters have a different meaning. Ъ indicates a sound somewhat similar to . Щ is pronounced as .
In the early Middle Ages, the Bulgarians used to write the Glagolitic alphabet created by Cyril and Methodius. Gradually, it was replaced by cyrillic. In order to write in the Bulgarian language, at the end of the XVIII century the 「civil font」 of Peter I was adapted — a simplified Russian version of the Cyrillic alphabet. Various versions of this alphabet were used (from 28 to 44 letters), and the alphabet proposed by Marin Drinov in 1870 was the most widely used. It included 32 letters prior to the 1945 reform, when Ѣ got removed and a large one Ѫ was deleted too. That is how the Bulgarian alphabet acquired its modern appearance.
-
D
-
L
-
P
-
ア
-
イ
-
ウ
-
エ
-
オ
-
カ
-
キ
-
ギ
-
ク
-
グ
-
コ
-
ゴ
-
サ
-
シ
-
ジ
-
ス
-
ソ
-
タ
-
チ
-
テ
-
デ
-
ト
-
ド
-
ナ
-
ハ
-
バ
-
パ
-
フ
-
ブ
-
ヘ
-
ベ
-
ポ
-
マ
-
ミ
-
メ
-
モ
-
ラ
-
リ
-
ル
-
レ
-
ロ
-
ヴ
-
中
-
五
-
仁
-
古
-
国
-
太
-
新
-
日
-
旧
-
注
-
白
-
皇
-
統
-
英