The question doesn't make much sense. All letters in any alphabet are symbols that represent sounds.
(Hebrew and Arabic are no different than Latin, Greek, or Russian in that respect. Each letter respresents a sound or sounds.)
Hebrew doesn't use symbols. It uses letters. "Randy" in Hebrew letters is ראנדי
(stylized characters) Hebrew uses the Hebrew alphabet, a block-letter alphabet, which consists of 22 consonants and no vowels. Arabic uses the Arabic alphabet, a cursive-style alphabet, which consists of 28 consonants (29 if you include Hamza), and no vowels. Most of the letters of of the Hebrew alphabet have similar names to their Arabic equivalents. Some of the emphatic letters of Arabic are missing in Hebrew, and the Hebrew letter Samech (ס) is missing from Arabic.
Differences:Hebrew has only 7 verb constructions and Arabic has 10Hebrew has fewer sounds than ArabicHebrew letters do not connect; Most Arabic letters do.
Hebrew doesn't have symbols. It has letters. Mark is spelled מארק
The term "Semitic" refers to a language group that includes Arabic and Hebrew. Here is an example sentence: "He studied the Semitic languages, such as Arabic and Hebrew, to broaden his understanding of Middle Eastern cultures."
Hebrew uses the Hebrew alphabet, and Arabic uses the Arabic alphabet. Both alphabets are consonant-based.
No. Hebrew doesn't use symbols. It uses letters. "Lily" in Hebrew letters is לילי
Arabic and Hebrew
Tel Aviv is a city in Israel, where Hebrew and Arabic are the official languages.
The two official languages of Israel are Arabic and Hebrew.
Languages that are read from left to right include English, French, German, Spanish, Italian, Russian, and many others.
There are many languages related to both Arabic and Hebrew, such as:AmharicTigrinyaNeo-AramaicSilt'eTigreSebat Bet GurageMalteseModern South ArabianInorSoddosyriacUgariticAncient EgyptianHarari