Page:Belarusian romanization table.pdf/2

{|style="width:100%; text-align:center"| Note
 * style="width:25%"|Vernacular
 * style="width:25%"|Romanization
 * style="width:25%"|Vernacular
 * style="width:25%"|Romanization
 * colspan="2"|Upper case letters
 * colspan="2"|Lower case letters
 * Ы
 * Y
 * ы
 * y
 * Ь
 * ʹ (soft sign)
 * ь
 * ʹ (soft sign)
 * Ѣ (see Note 2)
 * Ě
 * ѣ (see Note 2)
 * ě
 * Э
 * Ė
 * э
 * ė
 * Ю
 * I͡U
 * ю
 * i͡u
 * Я
 * I͡A
 * я
 * i͡a
 * }
 * ю
 * i͡u
 * Я
 * I͡A
 * я
 * i͡a
 * }
 * }


 * 1) Letter found in Old Belarusian and in modern publications in Tarashkevitsa orthography.
 * 2) Letter is considered obsolete for the modern Belarusian Cyrillic alphabet; found primarily in Old Belarusian and occasionally in late 19th- and early 20th-century texts.
 * 3) Do not confuse with the digraph кг (also romanized as “kh”). Manual review may be needed when transcribing data in vernacular characters in order to distinguish х from кг.
 * 4) Letter is considered obsolete for the modern Belarusian Cyrillic alphabet; found primarily in Old Belarusian and occasionally in late 19th- and early 20th-century texts. Do not confuse with the digraph шч (also romanized as “shch”). Manual review may be needed when transcribing data in vernacular characters in order to distinguish щ from шч.