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  2. Belarusian was written in the Latin script in 1941 to 1944 in the German-occupied Belarusian territories and by the Belarusian diaspora in Prague (1920s – c.1945). After the Second World War , Belarusian was occasionally written in the Latin script by the Belarusian diaspora in Western Europe and the Americas (notably in West Germany and the ...

  3. It was also during this period that handwritten Belarusian texts started to appear in the Latin alphabet (Lacinka). The earliest known printed Belarusian text in the Latin alphabet appeared in Witanie na Pierwszy Wiazd z Krolowca do Kadlubka Saskiego Wilenskiego , a Jesuit anti-Lutheran publication published in Wilno in 1642.

  4. The Latin script (lacinka) was used widely in Belarus for writing in Latin and Polish. From the 16th century, we also have examples of Belarusian texts, usually written in Latin script using the Polish alphabet.

  5. Sep 30, 2001 · Although the first known book in Latin appears within the present Belarusian borders in the beginning of the 11th century, writing in Belarus remains predominantly in the Cyrillic script until mid-16th century.

  6. The Biełarusian Łacinka is an umbrella term for several historical alphabets that are used to transliterate Biełarusian Cyrillic texts to Latin script. All variants of Łacinka incorporate diacritical marks, similar to the Czech, Polish, Serbian (in Latin conversion), and Sorbian alphabets.

  7. www.omniglot.com › conscripts › belarulacinkaBelarulacinka - Omniglot

    Belarulacinka is a way of writing Belarusian with the Latin alphabet created by Stefan Stanchev from Bulgaria in December 2017. His main aim was to create a Latin alphabet for Belarussian language that does not use so many diacritics. It also includes a few letters from the Cyrillic alphabet.

  8. Aug 22, 2003 · Belarusian language has a long tradition of using Lacinka (<a hrefarticles/art_lac1.html»>Belarusian Latin-script writing</a>). Just to give you one example, during 1863 anti-Russian uprising Kastus Kalinouski (Kalinowski) wrote all of his leaflets and newspapers in Lacinka.