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See Zs being displayed by Russian forces.
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See Z is not part of Cyrillic script.
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Nobody seems to agree on what Z even represents.
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See letter being cancelled for its implied associations just like what happened here.
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Dig on history of letter Q to find similarities.
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Cursive Q looks like a big number "2".
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What other letter looks like a "2".
You are now here.
The z thing makes so little sense. The Russian character for z sound is 3. The z symbol is a twist on the ribbon of st. George. St. George the dragonslayer was a 7th century saint who was beheaded for refusing to abandon his christian faith.
The z thing is a old nazi symbol actually or ancestral rune or something, read about it earlier today
Got any sauce?
That means you'd have it in your immediate history.
hm! So either way, if the Z is a Q or if the Z is a twist on St. George (like Newusertopumpmemes mentions), both do have the same ring to me... Remembering that St. George is the Dragon Slayer
Two more weeks
Z is Zorro, the masked hero Z is impedance Z is the vertical axis Z is a statistical measurement Z is the matrix, the diagonal elements of which are negative numbers Z is a way of representing a system of atoms Z signifies the last (i.e. Omega)
So many uses. And yet none really make sense to me.
It could simply be derived from "За победу"; for victory.
I agree with the 1st post here with the word 'За' meaning for but as I researched some I also found the Azov symbol is a Z with a line through it. From what I can see so far is Azov is their version of Antifa.
Just thoughts at this point.
Oh, for Pete's sake. From the discussion here, one would think the Russians never heard of the Roman or Greek alphabets. Of course, most Americans don't know anything about the Greek or Cyrillic alphabets---but we wallow in ignorance. A "Z" is a good, recognizable ROMAN alphabetic character, distinct from any Cyrillic character---which makes for good recognition. These are recognition signals to prevent friendly fire accidents. They correspond to the "invasion stripes" that were painted on Allied pursuit planes during the Normandy invasion, to prevent confusion with German pursuit planes. Things get very mixed up when combat is face-to-face.