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The romanization of Ukrainian, or Latinization of Ukrainian, is the representation of the Ukrainian language in Latin letters. Ukrainian is written in its own Ukrainian alphabet, which is based on the Cyrillic script. Romanization may be employed to represent Ukrainian text or pronunciation for non-Ukrainian readers, on computer systems that cannot reproduce Cyrillic characters, or for typists who are not familiar with the Ukrainian keyboard layout. Methods of romanization include transliteration (representing written text) and transcription (representing the spoken word).
In contrast to romanization, there have been several historical proposals for a Ukrainian Latin alphabet, usually based on those used by West Slavic languages, but none have been widely accepted.
Romanization systemsEdit
TransliterationEdit
Transliteration is the letter-for-letter representation of text using another writing system. Rudnyckyj classified transliteration systems into scientific transliteration, used in academic and especially linguistic works, and practical systems, used in administration, journalism, in the postal system, in schools, etc.<ref>Rudnyckyj 1948, p. 1.</ref> Scientific transliteration, also called the scholarly system, is used internationally, with very little variation, while the various practical methods of transliteration are adapted to the orthographical conventions of other languages, like English, French, German, etc.
Depending on the purpose of the transliteration it may be necessary to be able to reconstruct the original text, or it may be preferable to have a transliteration which sounds like the original language when read aloud.
Scientific transliterationEdit
Scientific transliteration, also called the academic, linguistic, international, or scholarly system, is most often seen in linguistic publications on Slavic languages. It is purely phonemic, meaning each character represents one meaningful unit of sound, and is based on the Croatian Latin alphabet.<ref>Transliteration Timeline Template:Webarchive on the website of the University of Arizona Library</ref> Different variations are appropriate to represent the phonology of historical Old Ukrainian (mid 11th–14th centuries) and Middle Ukrainian (15th–18th centuries).<ref>Template:Cite Q</ref>
A variation was codified in the 1898 Prussian Instructions for libraries, or Preußische Instruktionen (PI), and widely used in bibliographic cataloguing in Central Europe and Scandinavia. With further modifications it was published by the International Organization for Standardization as recommendation ISO/R 9 in 1954, revised in 1968, and again as an international standard in 1986 and 1995.
Representing all of the necessary diacritics on computers requires Unicode, Latin-2, Latin-4, or Latin-7 encoding. Other Slavic based romanizations occasionally seen are those based on the Slovak alphabet or the Polish alphabet, which include symbols for palatalized consonants.
Library of Congress systemEdit
The ALA-LC Romanization Tables were first discussed by the American Library Association in 1885,<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> and published in 1904 and 1908,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> including rules for romanizing Church Slavic, the pre-reform Russian alphabet, and Serbo-Croatian.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Revised tables including Ukrainian were published in 1941,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> and remain in use virtually unchanged according to the latest 2011 release.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> This system is used to represent bibliographic information by US and Canadian libraries, by the British Library since 1975,<ref name=British_Library>Searching for Cyrillic items in the catalogues of the British Library: guidelines and transliteration tables Template:Webarchive https://www.bl.uk/help/search-for-cyrillic-items Template:Webarchive</ref> and in North American publications.
In addition to bibliographic cataloguing, simplified versions of the Library of Congress system are widely used for romanization in the text of academic and general publications. For notes or bibliographical references, some publications use a version without ligatures, which offers sufficient precision but simplifies the typesetting burden and easing readability. For specialist audiences or those familiar with Slavic languages, a version without ligatures and diacritical marks is sometimes used.<ref name=":2">Template:Cite book</ref> For broader audiences, a "modified Library of Congress system" is employed for personal, organizational, and place names, omitting all ligatures and diacritics, ignoring the soft sign ь (ʹ), with initial Є- (I͡E-), Й- (Ĭ-), Ю- ( I͡U-), and Я- (I͡A-) represented by Ye-, Y-, Yu-, and Ya-, surnames' terminal -ий (-yĭ) and -ій (-iĭ) endings simplified to -y, and sometimes with common first names anglicized, for example, Олександр (Oleksandr) written as Alexander.
Typical Use Variation Example Original Cyrillic text – Ярослав Рудницький Library catalogue,
standalone bibliographyStrict ALA-LC I͡Aroslav Rudnyt͡sʹkyĭ Footnote or bibliography Without ligatures Iaroslav Rudnytsʹkyĭ Academic text Without ligatures or diacritics Iaroslav Rudnytskyi Names in general text Modified Library of Congress Yaroslav Rudnytsky
Similar principles were systematically described for Russian by J. Thomas Shaw in 1969,<ref>Template:Cite Q</ref> and since widely adopted. Their application for Ukrainian and multilingual text were described in the 1984 English translation of Kubiiovych's Encyclopedia of Ukraine<ref>Template:Cite Q</ref> and in the 1997 translation of Hrushevskyi's [[History of Ukraine-RusTemplate:Softsign]],<ref>Template:Cite Q</ref> and other sources have referred to these, for example, historian Serhii Plokhy in several works. However, the details of usage vary, for example, the authors of the Historical Dictionary of Ukraine render the soft sign ь before о with an i, "thus Khvyliovy, not Khvylovy, as in the Encyclopedia of Ukraine".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Requires Unicode for connecting diacritics, but only plain ASCII characters for a simplified version.
British StandardEdit
British Standard 2979:1958 "Transliteration of Cyrillic and Greek Characters",<ref>Template:Cite Q</ref> from BSI, is used by the Oxford University Press.<ref name=Oxford_Style_Manual>Oxford Style Manual (2003), "Slavonic Languages", s 11.41.2, p 350. Oxford University Press.</ref> A variation is used by the British Museum and British Library, but since 1975 their new acquisitions have been catalogued using Library of Congress transliteration.<ref name=British_Library />
In addition to the "British" system, the standard also includes tables for the "International" system for Cyrillic, corresponding to ISO/R 9:1968 (and ISO's recommendation reciprocally has an alternate system corresponding to BSI's).<ref name=":0">Template:Cite Q</ref> It also includes tables for romanization of Greek.
BGN/PCGNEdit
BGN/PCGN romanization is a series of standards approved by the United States Board on Geographic Names and Permanent Committee on Geographical Names for British Official Use. Pronunciation is intuitive for English-speakers. For Ukrainian, the former BGN/PCGN system was adopted in 1965, but superseded there by the Ukrainian National System in 2019.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> A modified version is also mentioned in the Oxford Style Manual.<ref name= Oxford_Style_Manual/>
Requires only ASCII characters if optional separators are not used.
GOST (1971, 1983)/Derzhstandart (1995, 2021)Edit
The Soviet Union's GOST, COMECON's SEV, and Ukraine's Derzhstandart are government standards bodies of the former Eurasian communist countries. They published a series of romanization systems for Ukrainian,Template:Cn which were replaced by ISO 9:1995. For details, see GOST 16876-71.
DSTU 9112:2021Edit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} On 1 April 2022, the "Cyrillic-Latin transliteration and Latin-Cyrillic retransliteration of Ukrainian texts. Writing rules" (ДСТУ 9112:2021) was approved as State Standard of Ukraine. The standard is based on modified ISO 9:1995 standard and was developed by the Technical Committee 144 "Information and Documentation" of the State Scientific and Technical Library of Ukraine. According to the SSTL, it could be used in future cooperation between the European Union and Ukraine, in which "Ukrainian will soon, along with other European languages, take its rightful place in multilingual natural language processing scenarios, including machine translation."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
The Derzhstandart 1995 system (invented by Maksym Vakulenko) is also mentioned in the DSTU 9112:2021 standard (approved in 2022) as the "B system"; the new standard also includes an "A system" with diacritical marks and some differences from ISO 9:1995: г=ğ, ґ=g, є=je, и=y, і=i, х=x, ь=j, ю=ju, я=ja.
ISO 9Edit
ISO 9 is a series of systems from the International Organization for Standardization. The ISO published editions of its "international system" for romanization of Cyrillic as recommendations (ISO/R 9) in 1954 and 1968, and standards (ISO 9) in 1986 and 1995. This was originally derived from scientific transliteration in 1954 and is meant to be usable by readers of most European languages. The 1968 edition also included an alternative system identical to the British Standard.<ref name=":0" />
The 1995 edition supports most national Cyrillic alphabets in a single transliteration table. It is a pure transliteration system, with each Cyrillic character represented by exactly one unique Latin character, making it reliably reversible, but sacrificing readability and adaptation to individual languages. It considers only graphemes and disregards phonemic differences. So, for example, г (Ukrainian He or Russian Ge) is always represented by the transliteration g; ґ (Ukrainian letter Ge) is represented by g̀.
Representing all of the necessary diacritics on computers requires Unicode, and a few characters are rarely present in computer fonts, for example g-grave: g̀.
Ukrainian National transliterationEdit
This is the official system of Ukraine, also employed by the United Nations and many countries' foreign services. It is currently widely used to represent Ukrainian geographic names, which were almost exclusively romanized from Russian before Ukraine's independence in 1991, and for personal names in passports. It is based on English orthography, and requires only ASCII characters with no diacritics. It can be considered a variant of the "modified Library of Congress system", but does not simplify the -ий and -ій endings.
Its first version was codified in Decision No. 9 of the Ukrainian Committee on Issues of Legal Terminology on April 19, 1996,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name=":3">Рішення Української Комісії з питань правничої термінології (in Ukrainian)</ref> stating that the system is binding for the transliteration of Ukrainian names in English in legislative and official acts.
A new official system was introduced for transliteration of Ukrainian personal names in Ukrainian passports in 2007.
An updated 2010 version became the system used for transliterating all proper names and was approved as Resolution 55 of the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine, January 27, 2010.<ref name="Decision no. 55">Resolution no. 55 of the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine, January 27, 2010</ref><ref>Romanization system in Ukraine, paper presented on East Central and South-East Europe Division of the United Nations Group of Experts on Geographical Names</ref> This modified earlier laws and brought together a unified system for official documents, publication of cartographic works, signs and indicators of inhabited localities, streets, stops, subway stations, etc.
It has been adopted internationally. The 27th session of the UN Group of Experts on Geographical Names (UNGEGN) held in New York 30 July and 10 August 2012 after a report by the State Agency of Land Resources of Ukraine (now known as Derzhheokadastr: Ukraine State Service of Geodesy, Cartography and Cadastre) experts<ref>The document prepared for the UNGEGN session by Ukrainian Experts.</ref> approved the Ukrainian system of romanization.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The BGN/PCGN jointly adopted the system in 2019.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Official geographic names are romanized directly from the original Ukrainian and not translated. For example, Kyivska oblast not Kyiv Oblast, Pivnichnokrymskyi kanal not North Crimean Canal.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Romanization for other languages than EnglishEdit
Romanization intended for readers of other languages than English is usually transcribed phonetically into the familiar orthography. For example, y, kh, ch, sh, shch for anglophones may be transcribed j, ch, tsch, sch, schtsch for German readers (for letters й, х, ч, ш, щ), or it may be rendered in Latin letters according to the normal orthography of another Slavic language, such as Polish or Croatian (such as the established system of scientific transliteration, described above).
Czech and Slovak standard transliteration uses letters with diacritics (ž, š, č, ď, ť, ň, ě) and letters i, y, j, h, ch, c in the local meaning. Diphthong letters are transcribed as two letters (ja, je, ji, ju, šč).<ref>Transliterace ukrajinské cyrilice (Transliteration of the Ukrainian Cyrillic, Library of the Czech Academy of Sciences</ref> Czech transliteration was used, for example, on hiking signs in Transcarpathia, which was established according to the methodology of the Czech Tourists Club – the Ukrainian markers replaced that later with the English transcription.<ref>Otakar Brandos: Jak psát ukrajinské názvy, Treking.cz, 8. 12. 2011</ref> However, the fact that Ukraine itself has started to use English transliteration on its documents and boards, also influences the practice in Czech and Slovak, which is also penetrated by English transliteration of Ukrainian.
Ad hoc romanizationEdit
Users of public-access computers or mobile text messaging services sometimes improvise informal romanization due to limitations in keyboard or character set. These may include both sound-alike and look-alike letter substitutions. Example: YKPAIHCbKA ABTOPKA for "УКРАЇНСЬКА АВТОРКА". See also Volapuk encoding.
This system uses the available character set.
Ukrainian telegraph codeEdit
For telegraph transmission. Each separate Ukrainian letter had a 1:1 equivalence to a Latin letter. Latin Q, W, V, and X are equivalent to Ukrainian Я (or sometimes Щ), В, Ж, Ь. Other letters are transcribed phonetically. This equivalency is used in building the KOI8-U table.
TranscriptionEdit
Transcription is the representation of the spoken word. Phonological, or phonemic, transcription represents the phonemes, or meaningful sounds of a language, and is useful to describe the general pronunciation of a word. Phonetic transcription represents every single sound, or phone, and can be used to compare different dialects of a language. Both methods can use the same sets of symbols, but linguists usually denote phonemic transcriptions by enclosing them in slashes / ... /, while phonetic transcriptions are enclosed in square brackets [ ... ].
- IPA
The International Phonetic Alphabet precisely represents pronunciation. It requires a special Unicode font.
Conventional romanization of proper namesEdit
In many contexts, it is common to use a modified system of transliteration that strives to be read and pronounced naturally by anglophones. Such transcriptions are also used for the surnames of people of Ukrainian ancestry in English-speaking countries (personal names have often been translated to equivalent or similar English names, e.g., "Alexander" for Oleksandr, "Terry" for Taras).
Typically, such a modified transliteration is based on the ALA-LC, or Library of Congress (in North America), or, less commonly, the British Standard system. Such a simplified system usually omits diacritics and ligatures (tie-bars) from, e.g., i͡e, ï or ĭ, often simplifies -yĭ and -iĭ word endings to "-y", omits romanizing the Ukrainian soft sign (ь) and apostrophe ('), and may substitute ya, ye, yu, yo for ia, ie, iu, io at the beginnings of words. It may also simplify doubled letters. Unlike in the English language where an apostrophe is punctuation, in the Ukrainian language it is a letter. Therefore sometimes Rus' is translated with an apostrophe, even when the apostrophe is dropped for most other names and words.
Conventional transliterations can reflect the history of a person or place. Many well-known spellings are based on transcriptions into another Latin alphabet, such as the German or Polish. Others are transcribed from equivalent names in other languages, for example Ukrainian Pavlo ("Paul") may be called by the Russian equivalent Pavel, Ukrainian Kyiv by the Russian equivalent Kiev.
The employment of romanization systems can become complex. For example, the English translation of Kubijovyč's Ukraine: A Concise Encyclopædia uses a modified Library of Congress (ALA-LC) system as outlined above for Ukrainian and Russian names—with the exceptions for endings or doubled consonants applying variously to personal and geographic names. For technical reasons, maps in the Encyclopedia follow different conventions. Names of persons are anglicized in the encyclopedia's text but also presented in their original form in the index. Various geographic names are presented in their anglicized, Russian, or both Ukrainian and Polish forms, and appear in several forms in the index. Scientific transliteration is used in linguistics articles. The Encyclopedia's explanation of its transliteration and naming convention occupies 2-1/2 pages.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Tables of romanization systemsEdit
Common systems for romanizing Ukrainian Cyrillic BritishTemplate:Efn BGN/PCGN 1965Template:Efn ALA-LCTemplate:Efn LC without diacritics<ref name=":2" /> modified LCTemplate:Efn Ukrainian NationalTemplate:Efn German dictionary<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> French dictionary<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Swedish Language Council<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> А а a a a a a a a a a Б б b b b b b b b b b В в v v v v v v w v v Г г h h h h h h, ghTemplate:Efn h h h Ґ ґ g g g g g g g g g Д д d d d d d d d d d Е е e e e e e e e e e Є є ye ye i͡e ie ie, ye- Template:Not a typo, ye-Template:Efn je Template:Not a typo je Ж ж zh zh z͡h zh zh zh sh j zj З з z z z z z z s z z И и ȳ y y y y y y y y І і i i i i i i i i i Ї ї yi yi ï ï i i, yi-Template:Efn ji ï ji, (formerly) ï Й й ĭ y ĭ i i, y- i, y-Template:Efn j y j К к k k k k k k k k k Л л l l l l l l l l l М м m m m m m m m m m Н н n n n n n n n n n О о o o o o o o o o o П п p p p p p p p p p Р р r r r r r r r r r С с s s s s s s s, ss s s Т т t t t t t t t t t У у u u u u u u u ou u Ф ф f f f f f f f f f Х х kh kh kh kh kh kh ch kh ch Ц ц ts ts t͡s ts ts ts z ts ts Ч ч ch ch ch ch ch ch tsch tch tj Ш ш sh sh sh sh sh sh sch ch sj Щ щ shch shch shch shch shch shch schtsch chtch sjtj Ь ь Template:Hamza or Template:Softsign Template:Hamza Template:Softsign Template:Softsign Ю ю yu yu i͡u iu iu, yu- iu, yu-Template:Efn ju iou ju, iuTemplate:Efn, uTemplate:Efn Я я ya ya i͡a ia ia, ya ia, ya-Template:Efn ja ia ja, iaTemplate:Efn, aTemplate:Efn Template:Hamza ˮ or Template:Hardsign ˮ ʼ Historical letters Ъ ъ ˮ or Template:Hardsign Ѣ ѣ i
International systems for romanizing Ukrainian Cyrillic Scientific (Template:Tooltip)<ref name=":1">Template:Cite Q</ref> Scientific (Template:Tooltip)<ref name=":1" /> ScientificTemplate:Efn<ref name=":1" /> Prussian Instr.<ref>Template:Cite Q</ref> ISO 1954 ISO 1968 basic ISO 1968 Ukr. var. ISO 1995 А а a a a a a a a a Б б b b b b b b b b В в v v v v v v v v Г г g h h h g g h g Ґ ґ g g ġ ġ g g g̀ Д д d d d d d d d d Е е e e e e e e e e Є є je je je je je ê Ж ж ž ž ž ž ž ž ž ž З з z z z z z z z z И и i y y i i i y i І і i y i ī i ī i ì Ї ї ji ji ï ï ï Й й j j j j j j j К к k k k k k k k k Л л l l l l l l l l М м m m m m m m m m Н н n n n n n n n n О о o o o o o o o o П п p p p p p p p p Р р r r r r r r r r С с s s s s s s s s Т т t t t t t t t t У у u u u u u u u u Ф ф f f f f f f f f Х х x x x ch h h ch h Ц ц c c c c c c c c Ч ч č č č č č č č č Ш ш š š š š š š š š Щ щ šč šč šč šč šč šč šč ŝ Ь ь ь Template:Hamza Template:Hamza Template:Softsign Template:Hamza Template:Softsign Template:Softsign Template:Softsign Ю ю ju ju ju ju ju ju ju û Я я ja ja ja ja ja ja ja â Template:Hamza Template:Hardsign, Template:Hamza Template:Hardsign Template:Hardsign Template:Hamza Historical letters Ъ ъ ъ ʺ _ Template:Hardsign Template:Hardsign Ы ы y y̌ y y y Ѣ ѣ i i i i i Ѥ ѥ je je Ѧ ѧ ę ę Ѩ ѩ ję ję Ѫ ѫ ǫ ǫ ă ȧ ʺ̣ Ѭ ѭ jǫ jǫ Ѯ ѯ ks ks Ѱ ѱ ps ps Ѳ ѳ th th ḟ ḟ ḟ Ѵ ѵ ẏ ẏ ẏ Ѡ ѡ o o
Ukrainian official systems for romanizing Ukrainian Cyrillic GOST 1971 GOST 1986 Derzhstandart 1995 National 1996<ref name=":3" /> Passport 2004 Passport 2007<ref>Decision no. 858 of the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine, July 26, 2007</ref>Template:Failed verification National 2010<ref name="Decision no. 55"/> А а a a a a a a a Б б b b b b b b b В в v v v v v, w v v Г г g g gh h, ghTemplate:Efn h, g g h, ghTemplate:Efn Ґ ґ g g g, h g g Д д d d d d d d d Е е e e e e e e e Є є je je je Template:Not a typo, ye-Template:Efn Template:Not a typo, ye-Template:Efn Template:Not a typo Template:Not a typo, ye-Template:Efn Ж ж zh ž zh zhTemplate:Efn zh, j zh zh З з z z z z z z z И и i i y y y y y І i i i i i i i i Ї ї ji i ji i, yi-Template:Efn i, yi-Template:Efn i i, yi-Template:Efn Й й j j jTemplate:Efn i, y-Template:Efn i, y-Template:Efn i i, y-Template:Efn К к k k k k k, c k k Л л l l l l l l l М м m m m m m m m Н н n n n n n n n О о o o o o o o o П п p p p p p p p Р р r r r r r r r С с s s s s s s s Т т t t t t t t t У у u u u u u u u Ф ф f f f f f f f Х х kh h kh kh kh kh kh Ц ц c c c ts ts ts ts Ч ч ch č ch ch ch ch ch Ш ш sh š sh sh sh sh sh Щ щ shh šč shh sch shch shch shch Ь ь Template:Softsign Template:Softsign jTemplate:Efn Template:Hamza Template:Softsign Ю ю ju ju ju iu, yu-Template:Efn iu, yu-Template:Efn iu iu, yu-Template:Efn Я я ja ja ja ia, ya-Template:Efn ia, ya-Template:Efn ia ia, ya-Template:Efn Template:Hamza * Template:Hardsign Template:HamzaTemplate:Efn ˮ
See alsoEdit
- Belarusian alphabet
- Cyrillic alphabets
- Cyrillic script
- Faux Cyrillic
- Greek alphabet
- Macedonian alphabet
- Montenegrin alphabet
- Romanization of Belarusian
- Romanization of Bulgarian
- Romanization of Greek
- Romanization of Macedonian
- Romanization of Russian
- Ukrainian alphabet
- Ukrainian Latin alphabet
- Russian alphabet
- Scientific transliteration of Cyrillic
- Serbian Cyrillic alphabet
NotesEdit
ReferencesEdit
- Clara Beetle ed. (1949), A.L.A. Cataloging Rules for Author and Title Entries, Chicago: American Library Association, p 246.
- British Standard 2979 : 1958, London: British Standards Institution.
- Daniels, Peter T., and William Bright, eds. (1996). The World's Writing Systems, pp. 700, 702, Oxford University Press. Template:ISBN.
- G. Gerych (1965), Transliteration of Cyrillic Alphabets, masters thesis, Ottawa: University of Ottawa.
- Maryniak, K. (2008), 'Короткий огляд систем транслітерації з української на англійську мову' (Brief Overview of Transliteration Systems from Ukrainian to English), Західньоканадський збірник — Collected Papers on Ukrainian Life in Western Canada, Part Five, Edmonton–Ostroh: Shevchenko Scientific Society in Canada, pp. 478–84.
- Rudnyc'kyj, Jaroslav B. (1948). Чужомовні транслітерації українських назв: Iнтернаціональна, англійська, французька, німецька, еспанська й португальська (Foreign transliterations of Ukrainian names: The international, English, French, German, Spanish and Portuguese), Augsburg: Iнститут родо- й знаменознавства.
- U.S. Board on Geographic Names, Foreign Names Committee Staff (1994). Romanization Systems and Roman-Script Spelling Conventions, p. 105.
External linksEdit
- English transliteration by the Central Certification Authority of the Ministry of Digital Transformation of Ukraine, whether by letters (e.g. in passport number) and by words
- English transliteration by the State Migration Service of Ukraine
- Standard Ukrainian Transliteration — multistandard bidirectional online transliteration (BGN/PCGN, scholarly, national, ISO 9, ALA-LC, etc.) (in Ukrainian)
- Ukrainian Transliteration—online Ukrainian transliteration
- Ukrainian Translit—online Ukrainian transliteration service (non-standard system)
- Ukrainian-Latin and Latin-Ukrainian—online transliterator (non-standard system)
- Transliteration history Template:Webarchive—history of the transliteration of Slavic languages into Latin alphabets
- Lingua::Translit Perl module covering a variety of writing systems. Transliteration according to several standards (e.g. ISO 9 and DIN 1460).
Transliteration systemsEdit
- Transliteration of Non-Roman Scripts A collection of writing systems and transliteration tables, by Thomas T. Pedersen. PDF reference charts for many languages' transliteration systems. Ukrainian PDF
- Latin transliteration—transliteration systems used for national Ukrainian domain names (in Ukrainian)
- Decision No. 858 affecting transliteration of names passports (2007) (Ukrainian)
- Working Group on Romanization Systems, under the United Nations Conferences on the Standardization of Geographical Names.
- ALA-LC Romanization Tables Scanned text of the 1997 edition of the ALA-LC Romanization Tables: Transliteration Schemes for Non-Roman Scripts. Ukrainian PDF
- BGN/PCGN 1965 Romanization System for Ukrainian at geonames.nga.mil
- Cyrillic Transliteration Table (Ukrainian and Russian), based on both International Linguistic and ALA-LC systems
- Ukrainian language in the International Phonetic Alphabet (PDF, in Ukrainian)