>>321066
Actually, I did just realise there's one exception to this. Although the letters е / e and і / i, which are identical in both the Cyrillic and Latin alphabet, are always pronounced as some form of e and i, eg. /e/ or /ɘ/ and /ɪ/ or /i/ being the most common, these don't matter nearly as much as other letters and in practice no one pays attention or even gives a shit if you swap their pronounciations in words where it won't change the meaning, or if you pronounce them the exact same or differently or whatever. But that's not a big deal, you could say "әдемі / ädemi" as /ædemi/, /ædɘmi/, /ædɘmɪ/, /ædɪmi/, /ædɪmɪ/, /ædɘmɘ/, /ædɛmɛ/, /ædɛmi/, /ædemɛ/, /ædimi/, /ædɛmɪ/, /ædɪmɛ/ or even weirder pronunciations but people would still understand that you mean "beautiful" because why the fuck wouldn't they?
On social media sites people sometimes even spell Kazakh as if it was Russian, reducing the number of both vowels and consonants significantly, yet no one has trouble understanding each other. It's as annoying to me as newlywed teens posting cuddly pregnancy selfies and pics of their newborn babies. No one wants to see that shit, yet they do it. Exactly the same as "сен адеми киз". No one wants to see that shit, yet they do it. Why? Because it's not going to make a single difference and it's the normalfag thing to do. Most people are normalfags. I'm not sure what my point is anymore but fuck you for expecting everything to have a point.
Before I forget, names can be an exception to pronunciation/spelling rules generally because of Russification. For example of this, the vast majority of surnames end in "-yev" / "-yeva", however these are spelled "-ев" / "-ева" in Cyrillic, not "-йев" / "-йева" because the suffix comes from Russian and the Russian "е" is "ye". So in the Cyrillic Alphabet, Nazarbayev for example is spelled "Назарбаев (Nazarbaev)". Sometimes the "yev" is pronounced like "yiff", you know like how in English it's sometimes "off", supposedly that's common but personally I think that's bullshit because everyone I know says it /jev/ by default. No, you rabid Anglocunts, that does not have anything to do with the Jews. Jew is pronounced /dʒuː/. In the Cyrillic alphabet, that would be джуу / жуу or джұұ / жұұ depending on if you're using Russian or Kazakh alphabet.
>inb4 autism
Bring on the shit-flinging, my body is ready. My autism is superior than your autism, unless you are the Turkmen gommunist shill.