hundred
thousand
million
eighty
eighteen
nineteen
sixteen
interogative
Chinese does not use any alphabets. Chinese writing is not alphabetic, rather, it is pictographic.
There are many alphabets used in Canada, but officially there are only 2: the English and French Alphabets.
It depends on what the phrase "alphabets of the drive" refers to. This is not a common English phrase.
Only 26 alphabets (A to Z)
One. The English version of the Latin Alphabet.
There is no alphabet in the Chinese language, unlike English or even Korean or Japanese (and even Korean and Japanese have no set order for their 'alphabet'), as Chinese language is simply written with different strokes put together. You might find websites that give you the way English alphabets might be written in Chinese, phonetic-wise, but that is only how we would pronounce English alphabets in Chinese phonetically, and not the Chinese alphabet. :)
"C" is the third letter of the English Alphabet
If you think this is your answer this is surerealism. (it can be some english alphabets too)
In this generation we teach 26 alphabets in English and 28 alphabets in Filipino while in the earlier years they teach only 17 alphabets,and this alphabets have 3 vowels and 14 consonants only
There is only one English alphabet, and yes, my children can recognize it.
It's neither. Both the phrases "A-Z alphabet" and "A-Z alphabets" don't make any sense in English.
how do you pronounce the greek word όλα in english