• TwilightKiddy@programming.dev
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    5 months ago

    Yea, Croatia is the only place it got widely used. Is it some kind of historical elective course in Croatian schools? Been a coupe of times in Croatia, never seen Glagolitic in the wild, though. Maybe wasn’t looking good enough.

    • Redex@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      I mean regular people don’t know how to read it, except if you randomly decided you wanted to. It’s pretty big culturally, e.g. the Baška tablet is a very important piece of history written in glagolitic that everyone knows about, and I’ve seen the alphabet randomly displayed in a few places, but nobody actually uses it today.

    • OpFARv30@lemmy.ml
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      5 months ago

      Is it some kind of historical elective course

      No, there was a poster showing correspondence with Latin on the wall, somewhere. The symbols are almost 1-1 with modern orthography, so it takes only about a week of practice. And I was really bored.

      never seen Glagolic in the wild

      It’s about as distant from modern use as runes are for germanic speakers, but maybe with different connotations. Decorative nonsense.

      But I did submit essays written with that when I wanted to fail with style. :)

      I also met a guy in college who used it to keep notes. That guy was also bored.