Rules of Russian Orthography and Punctuation
Another editor has reviewed this page's proposed deletion, endorses the proposal to delete, and adds:
If you remove the {{proposed deletion/dated}} tag above, please also remove this {{Proposed deletion endorsed}} tag. |
The Rules of Russian Orthography and Punctuation (Script error: The function "langx" does not exist., tr.: Pravila russkoj orfografii i punktuacii) of 1956 is the current reference to regulate the modern Russian language.[1] Approved by the Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Soviet Ministries of Education and Higher Education, it also became the first legally fixed obligatory set of rules.[1] However, it became a rare book and its principles are learned from school-books and manuals based upon it.
The rules it lays down have been criticised for incompleteness in some cases. In particular, the spellings of such words as maître (мэтр, metr) or racket (рэкет, reket) are given with "э", whereas in other rules there are three fixed words in which a hard consonant is followed by "э": peer (пэр, per), mayor (мэр, mer) and sir (сэр, ser). In 1990 an attempt was made to fill the gaps in the Rules of Russian Orthography and Punctuation.[1]
See also
Notes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Svetlana Kuzmina. "Reforma ili novaya redaktsiya?" (in русский). Retrieved 2007-10-13.
| This article about a book on language, linguistics or translation is a stub. You can help EverybodyWiki by expanding it. |
This article "Rules of Russian Orthography and Punctuation" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical and/or the page Edithistory:Rules of Russian Orthography and Punctuation. Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.
