к
|
Translingual
Gallery
- Cyrillic letter К к, normal above, italics below.
- Handwritten forms
Ossetian
Pronunciation
- (phoneme) IPA(key): /k/
See also
- (Cyrillic-script letters) А а (A a), Ӕ ӕ (Æ æ), Б б (B b), В в (V v), Г г (G g), Гъ гъ (Ǧ ǧ), Д д (D d), Дж дж (Ǵ ǵ), Дз дз (Ʒ ʒ), Е е (E e), З з (Z z), И и (I i), Й й (J j), К к (K k), Къ къ (K’ k’), Л л (L l), М м (M m), Н н (N n), О о (O o), П п (P p), Пъ пъ (P’ p’), Р р (R r), С с (S s), Т т (T t), Тъ тъ (Tʺ t’), У у (U u), Ф ф (F f), Х х (X x), Хъ хъ (Q q), Ц ц (C c), Цъ цъ (C’ c’), Ч ч (Ḱ ḱ), Чъ чъ (Ḱ’ ḱ’), Ы ы (Y y)
Russian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [k]
Audio (file)
Letter
к • (k) (lower case, upper case К)
Etymology 2
From Proto-Slavic *kъ(n).
Alternative forms
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [k]
Audio (file)
Preposition
к • (k) (+ dative case)
Usage notes
ко (ko) is used before words beginning with certain awkward consonant clusters such as мн- (mn-), вс- (vs-), вт- (vt-), and сн- (sn-).
Etymology 3
Abbreviation of кило- (kilo-).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [kʲɪlə]
Serbo-Croatian
Alternative forms
- (uppercase): К
Pronunciation
- (phoneme) IPA(key): /k/
Letter
к (Latin spelling k)
Etymology 2
From Proto-Slavic *kъ(n), from Proto-Indo-European *kom.
Alternative forms
- ка (See usage notes)
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.