The palatalization mark is one of the historic signs of Cyrillic that was used in Old Church Slavonic to indicate the palatalization of the base consonant. An example of use is in the word избавитєл҄ь ('redeemer', palatalized л [lʲ]).
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See also
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Italics indicate that the language no longer uses Cyrillic |
Cyrillic alphabets | |
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Cyrillization of | |
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Primary letters | |
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Other Slavic letters | |
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Non-Slavic letters | |
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Slavic archaic letters | |
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Non-Slavic archaic letters | |
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Archaic diacritics | |
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Combinations of Cyrillic letters | |
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In Latin, Cyrillic and Greek |
- ◌́ ◌̋ acute and Roman apex, double acute
- ◌̆ ◌̑ breve, inverted breve
- ◌̌ caron, háček
- ◌̧ cedilla
- ◌̂ circumflex
- ◌̈ diaeresis, umlaut, other
- ◌̇ ◌̣ dot
- ◌̀ ◌̏ grave, double grave
- ◌̉ hook above
- ◌̡ ◌̢ palatal hook, retroflex hook
- ◌̛ horn
- ◌ͅ iota subscript
- ◌̄ macron
- ◌̨ ogonek, nosinė
- ◌̊ ◌̥ overring, underring
- ◌͂ perispomene
- ◌͗ sicilicus
- ◌̃ tilde
- ◌᷃ Vietnamese tilde
- ◌῾ ◌᾿ rough breathing, smooth breathing
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In Early Cyrillic | |
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In Indic | |
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In other scripts | |
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Marks used as diacritics | |
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Non-diacritic uses | |
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In Unicode | |
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