In the annals - Russian, Russian. Where did the second C come from and why is it needed? IN AND. Dahl argued that it is wrong to write "Russian" with two "s" and wrote with one (Russian language, Russian people, Russian land, etc.).
Old wrote Pravda Ruska; only Poland called us Russia, Russians, Russians, according to the Latin spelling, and we adopted this, transferred it to the Cyrillic alphabet and write Russian! (V. I. Dal)
Latin spelling - if there is one C, then it is pronounced as [z], and if two, then [s].
Russian spelling
"Explanatory Dictionary of the Living Great Russian Language", letter C:
Promotional video:
S, es, se, word; under the title means 200, and with the sign ҂ two hundred thousand. Matches very rarely (quarrel, lend), more often it is wrong (Russian, invented by Russian, Rossiavm. Rus).
Why double consonants when it is contrary to our language, and with good pronunciation, cannot be heard? [IN AND. Dahl]