The following languages are listed:
Abaza, Abkhaz, Adyghian, Altai, Avar, Azerbaijani*,
Bashkir, Bulgarian, Buryat, Byelorussian,
Chechen*, Chukchi, Chuvash, Crimean Tatar*,
Darg, Dungan, Erzyan, Eskimo, Even, Evenk, Gagauz?,
Ingush, Kabardian-Circassian, Kalmyk, Kara-Kalpak?,
Karachay-Balkar, Kazakh, Khakass, Khanty, Komi (Zyryan),
Komi-Permyak, Koryak, Kumyk, Kyrgyz,
Lakh, Lezgian, Macedonian, Mansi,
Hill Mari, Meadow Mari, Moksha, Moldavian*, Mongolian,
Nanai, Nenets, Nivkh, Nogay, Ossetic, Russian,
Selkup, Serbian,
Tabasaran, Tajik, Talysh?, Tatar, Turkmen*, Tuvinian,
Udmurt, Ukrainian, Uzbek*, Yakut.
* languages that are currently converting to latin script.
? languages that may possibly follow the conversion to latin script.
This list is far from being complete. To better understand the issues involved, please see The Ethnologue Database. Most of the languages mentioned above can be found under Russia, Europe or Russia, Asia.
Note - Important and additional characters are measured against standard
(i.e. 'everyday', not 'ISO') Russian alphabet which already includes
two precomposed characters: Cyrillic letter IO (Ё) and Cyrillic
letter short I (Й).
IO is not used in Ukrainian, Moldavian, Bulgarian, Macedonian, Serbian,
Kurdish and Abkhaz languages, it is assumed to be present in all other
Cyrillic-based languages.
SHORT I, and several other characters of Russian alphabet are also not
present in other Cyrillic languages, e.g. Serbian does not use Й,
Щ, Ъ, Ы, Ь, Э, Ю, Я.