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==Name==
'''{{tp|sitelen Kililisa}}''' is a tokiponization of Russian
Serbo-Croatian
==Alphabet==
▲Serbo-Croatian [[wikt:ћирилица#Serbo-Croatian|ћирилица]] and Polish [[wikt:cyrylica#Polish|cyrylica]] may be tokiponized as '''{{tp|sitelen Sililisa}}'''. This tokiponization is not in active use, and is only listed here for completeness.
===Consonants===
{| class="wikitable"
! {{tp|sitelen Lasina
|-
| m
| м
|-
| n
| н
|-
| p
| п
|-
| t
| т
|-
| k
| к
|-
| s
| с
|-
| w
|-
| l
| л
|-
| j
|}
===Vowels===
{| class="wikitable"
|+ Without iotated vowels
|-
! {{tp|sitelen Lasina
! {{tp|sitelen Kililisa}}
|-
| a
|-
| e
|-
| i
|-
| o
| о
|-
| u
| у
|}
===Iotated vowels===
{| class="wikitable"
|+ With iotated vowels
|-
! {{tp|sitelen Lasina
! {{tp|sitelen Kililisa}}
|-
| a
|-
| e
|-
| i
|-
| o
| о
|-
| u
| у
|-
| ja
| я
|-
| je
|-
| jo
| ё
|-
| ju
| ю
|}
==Variation==
Like the Latin alphabet, the Cyrillic alphabet shows
==={{tp|w}}===
All Slavic languages (except Polish) lack a phonemic /w v/ distinction, and most lack a [w] sound, which presents a problem for {{tp|sitelen Kililisa}}. Two letters are commonly used to represent Toki Pona /w/: {{w|Ve (Cyrillic)|Вв}} and {{w|Short U (Cyrillic)|Ўў}}.
The letter
The letter
▲The letter '''Вв''' is present in all Cyrillic orthographies for Slavic languages, and is used to represent /v/, with the exception of Ukrainian /ʋ ~ w/, and Serbo-Croatian /ʋ/. The phoneme /v/ in Slavic languages is largely derived from PIE *w.
▲The letter '''Ўў''' is only present in the Belarusian orthography, where it is used for /v/ in coda position, where it is pronounced as [w]. It is largely derived from Proto-Slavic *l in coda position, which was [[w:L-vocalization|vocalized]] in Belarusian, Ukrainian, and Serbo-Croatian.
{| class="wikitable"
Line 92 ⟶ 117:
| {{tp|sitelen Lasina}} || o tawa waso
|-
| В в
|-
| Ў ў
|}
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|+ Examples of /j/
|-
! Method
! Example
! Notes
|-
| jan Sonja li jo e ijo jelo
|
|-
| јан Сонја ли јо е ијо јело
| Most similar to Vuk's Cyrillic
|-
| йан Сонйа ли йо е ийо йело
|
|-
! Iotated vowels
| Most similar to Russian Cyrillic
|}
==={{tp|nj}}===
When iotated vowels are used, /nj/ becomes a special case. Speakers of East Slavic languages have a /nʲ/ phoneme and may erroneously read the sequence of <н> + iotated vowel as [nʲ]. Though a minor issue, this has caused some users of {{tp|sitelen Kililisa}} to employ disambiguation strategies:
Line 131 ⟶ 168:
|}
==={{tp|e}}, {{tp|je}}, {{tp|i}}===
Cyrillic scripts differ in their representation of non-open front vowels:
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! Script !! /e/ !! /je/ !! /i/ !! Example of derived {{tp|sitelen Kililisa}}
|-
|-
|-
|-
|-
|-
|}
==See also==
* [[Writing systems]]
▲*{{tp|[[sitelen Lasina]]}}
==References==
|