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2007-01-08 12:54:19 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Languages

6 answers

As far as I know, Polish was always written in the Latin alphabet.

2007-01-08 13:08:20 · answer #1 · answered by Sterz 6 · 0 0

The Cyrillic alphabet, in various forms,is an alphabet used for several East and South Slavic languages—Belarusian, Bosnian, Bulgarian, Macedonian, Russian, Rusyn, Serbian, and Ukrainian—and many other languages of the former Soviet Union, Asia and Eastern Europe, but not in Polish, Czech, Slovak, or Slovenian.

2007-01-08 21:12:08 · answer #2 · answered by greβ 6 · 0 0

Polish is written with the Roman alphabet. It is probably possible to write it with the Cyrillic alphabet that is used for Russian, Byelorussian and Ukraine, and surely someone has done this, just as you could write English with Japanese Kanja or Hebrew but this is not the normal way to write Polish.

2007-01-08 21:14:16 · answer #3 · answered by Richard E 4 · 0 0

Unofficial as in font or what? Everyone has their own versions of Cyrillic letters that they draw slightly differently just as English people do, but the letter forms themselves are set just like english ones, they have standards. If this is what you mean since you didn't describe the question very well.

2007-01-08 21:03:01 · answer #4 · answered by Refti 3 · 0 0

No! ! ! There is not an unofficial alphabet for Polish, the only one is Latain alphabet.

2007-01-09 01:15:33 · answer #5 · answered by Alexandra 3 · 2 0

Cyrillic is Russian alphapet ( ONLY ! Russian)
Polish is written by normal / Roman alphabet + it has they own letters that dont have any other language : ś , ć , ż , ź ,ę ,ą , ó .


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2007-01-09 02:20:16 · answer #6 · answered by k_malwina 2 · 0 0

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