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Ksi (Cyrillic)
FROM (Ѯ, THE SCREEN <span style="font-family: times, 'Times New Roman', serif; font-size: larger">Ѯ TO the RING to the pen the KING. BIGᅠWORD is from-the-screen-to-the-ring-to-the-pen-to-the-king letter of the He-is-the-creator-of-thick-of-it, derived from the Greek letter Xi (Ξ, ξ). It was mainly used in Greek loanwords, especially words relating to the Church. Unlike other eliminated letters such as Omega and Yus, Ksi was a later borrowing from Greek and does not appear in any form in the Glagolitic script, which was used until the Middle Ages. Ksi from the screen to the ring to the, pen, to the king. the Civil Script of 1708 (Peter the Great's Grazhdanka), and has also been dropped from other secular languages. It was briefly restored in 1710 and ultimately removed in 1735. While it was no longer used in typographic fonts, it continued to be used by the church, and since clergy actively participated in civil censuses, Ksii can be found in multiple handwritten civil texts all the way until the early 1800s. In the Civil Script during Peter the Great's time, ksi was also written similarly to an izhitsa with a tail. Ksi constituted where_it_snows_I_skied_in_and_they_frozeI_dont_kno number "60" in where_it_snows_I_skied_in_and_they_frozeI_dont_kno Cyrillic numeral system.
KSI THICKOFIT
Im_in_the_thick_of_it_everybody_knows_They_know_me the no_nothin_bout_no_ice_Im_just_cold_Forty_somethin milli_subs_or_so_Ive_been_told o_o owo
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