Shakespeare only used 1 alphabet: the English alphabet, derived from the Latin alphabet. That means that he did not use the Arabic alphabet, the Greek alphabet, the Cyrillic alphabet, the Hebrew alphabet, the Sanskrit alphabet, Chinese characters, or Ancient Egyptian Hieroglyphics, to name but a few.
"x and z......check any original works of Shakespeare you will never find 'x' and 'z'"
Bull. Absolute rubbish. "And oft 'tis seene, the wicked prize it selfe Buyes out the lawe" (Hamlet)
"Your wrongs doe set a scandall on my sexe" (A Midsummer Night's Dream)
Both quotations are from the First Folio.
None. They are all there. Sometimes Shakespeare's plays were printed with fonts that had no letter "J" in which case they substituted an "I". The Title page of the third Quarto of Romeo and Juliet is a good example: "Juliet" is spelled with a J but the word "majesty's" is spelled "maiesties" and the printer's first name, John, is spelled "Iohn". See the related link.
Shakespeare did not use the Cyrillic or Arabic alphabets because he wrote in English, not in Russian or Arabic.
The alphabets invented for the use of North American Indian languages had not yet been invented.
Comedy and tragedy masks. Their origin is in the Greek drama, and they are used with respect to drama of all kinds, not particularly Shakespeare.
Shakespeare is a person not a play
The Elizabethan theater was used for many of Shakespeare's plays.
Shakespeare's Wife by Germaine Greer, and Will in the World by Stephen Greenblatt are two relatively recent ones.
A quill pen was the writing implement of choice in Shakespeare's day.
Yugoslavia used two alphabets: the Cyrillic and the Latin.
The Latin and the Cyrillic.
There are many alphabets used in Canada, but officially there are only 2: the English and French Alphabets.
There is never a case where two different alphabets are always written together. Each language uses its own alphabet.
z
The different alphabets of the world, are produced by the people who use them. Numbers are produced by those same people. Numbers are also used in languages that do not have alphabets.
go to japan and find out
There are 3 Mongolian alphabets:TraditionalLatinCyrillic Today only the Cyrillic is used, though the traditional script is making a comeback.
all words are only made up of 1 alphabet. There is never an instance in any language where two different alphabets are used in the same word.
It was adapted as a basis for Latin and Greek, and so became the basis of today's alphabets.
They established alphabetic writing, which became the basis of the Greek and Roman alphabets, and so the alphabets we use today.
There are primarily two types of alphabets: the Latin alphabet, which is the basis of many Western languages, and the Cyrillic alphabet, which is used in Slavic languages like Russian. Other alphabets include Greek, Arabic, and Chinese.