Lol. you should check out that keyboard again. It’s a Qwerty AND Cyrillic keyboard which clearly shows the the Cyrillic letter ж uses the same key as the ;/: button on qwerty.
In before this person uses the fact that I know how to type a Unicode character as “proof” of my bot-ness.
I think you’ll find my post history about Linux, volunteering with refugees, and pictures of museums to be consistent with my anti-war stance and offer a hint as to why I know a bunch of historical facts.
you mean the photo you shared? I’m confused. There are Qwerty letters on the left side of each key cap and Cyrillic on the right, or were you under the impression that Cyrillic uses both alphabets?
Lol. you should check out that keyboard again. It’s a Qwerty AND Cyrillic keyboard which clearly shows the the Cyrillic letter ж uses the same key as the ;/: button on qwerty.
In before this person uses the fact that I know how to type a Unicode character as “proof” of my bot-ness.
I think you’ll find my post history about Linux, volunteering with refugees, and pictures of museums to be consistent with my anti-war stance and offer a hint as to why I know a bunch of historical facts.
Show me that keyboard.
you mean the photo you shared? I’m confused. There are Qwerty letters on the left side of each key cap and Cyrillic on the right, or were you under the impression that Cyrillic uses both alphabets?
ah. I apologize. As this Quora post explains, it does appear on the keyboard, but it’s just awkward to press.
https://www.quora.com/Why-do-Russians-use-as-a-smiley-instead-of
here’s another link verifying the claim that )) is more common than :) for Russian speakers.
https://news.itmo.ru/en/features/life_in_russia/news/13133/
but I’m gonna mute you, because you’re clearly just a moron.