About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 33. Chapters: Ja alif, Khanate of Kazan, Battle of Kazan, Kazan State University, 1995 Airstan incident, Kingdom of Balhara, Mongol invasion of Volga Bulgaria, Kasimov, Siege of Kazan, 1917 Kazan Gunpowder Plant fire, All-Tatar Public Center, Esegel, Tokhtamysh, Kazan Governorate, Ca far Tarix, Battle of Samara Bend, Kazan State Medical University, Kazan Operation, Obsolete Tatar units of measurement, Xosayen Yama ev, Pitchfork Uprising, Siege of Bilar, Muhtasib, Waisi movement, Bezdna Unrest, Tatar Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, J nis Judi, Tatar Union of the Godless, List of Kazan khans, Ghabdennasir Qursawi, Ittifaq party, 1921-1922 famine in Tatarstan, Alp Iluetuer, Kazan Chronicle, Qolsharif, Baranjars, Muslim Socialist Committee of Kazan, Arsk Uprising, Cukataw, Arsk Kanton, List of Qasim khans, Alm, Barab z, Suar, Suars, Nurlatsky District, Tatar ASSR, Ukek, Suar Principality, Qashan, Qashan Principality, Arca ya, Balymer complex, Archa Darugha, Ar begs, Mi atamaq, Mukhsha, Qarachi, Alpaw t, Qo caq, Cangali bek, Bilars, ilki. Excerpt: Ja alif, Janalif or Yanalif (Tatar ja a lifba/yana alifba ja alif/yanalif, Cyrillic, "new alphabet") was the first Latin writing system used during the Soviet epoch for the Tatar language in the 1930s. It replaced the Yana imla Arabic script-based alphabet in 1928 and was replaced by the Cyrillic alphabet in 1939. There were 33 letters in Ja alif; nine were for vowels. The apostrophe was used for the glottal stop (h mz /hamza) and was sometimes sorted as a letter. Other characters were also in use for foreign names. The small letter B looks like (to prevent confusion with ), and the capital letter Y looks like . The letter looks like N n/ which has a descender as in Cyrillic letters,, . The letter no. 33 (similar to Zhuang ) isn't represented in Unicode, but ...