Not the point of your post, but I’ve never seen Gorbatschow spelled like that. In English it’s transliterated as Gorbachev. That’s super interesting. Like I know Russian has a different alphabet, but I just never thought about how Latin spellings of Russian words are basically approximations. I wouldn’t even know how to figure out other languages’ spellings of words like that. Like I could go to the other languages’ wikipedia pages… but I’d need to know the spelling to get there.
Wikipedia can work as a translation tool, because the same concept is linked through the language selection. You go to the English page for Gorbachev and open the language menu which will show you pages about the same person in all available and linked languages.
Not the point of your post, but I’ve never seen Gorbatschow spelled like that. In English it’s transliterated as Gorbachev. That’s super interesting. Like I know Russian has a different alphabet, but I just never thought about how Latin spellings of Russian words are basically approximations. I wouldn’t even know how to figure out other languages’ spellings of words like that. Like I could go to the other languages’ wikipedia pages… but I’d need to know the spelling to get there.
Wikipedia can work as a translation tool, because the same concept is linked through the language selection. You go to the English page for Gorbachev and open the language menu which will show you pages about the same person in all available and linked languages.
That’s actually really cool!