Probably you can find subtitles like that somewhere, but don't look for "Japanese Latin Letters".
The common name is "Romaji" or "Romanji"
In Latin letters: Onchi
One example of a language that uses non-Latin letters and symbols is Japanese. Japanese writing system includes characters called kanji, hiragana, and katakana, which are different from the Latin alphabet used in English.
Latin and German are western languages, so they use letters just like how we write English. Japanese, Chinese and Arabic are eastern languages, so instead of using letters, they use characters that consists of strokes.
Aside from Kanji, there is Hiragana and Katakana (which are under a group called Kana). When Japanese is written using English letters (technically Latin letters), it's called "romaji" or romanization.
The three writing systems used in Japanese are:HiraganaKatakanaKanjiRomaji is a 4th system used to write Japanese with Latin letters. Romaji is not routinely used though.
not Japanese
Though Google's translation service is not particularly accurate for anything beyond the most rudimentary sentences, if you are translating into Japanese there is an option to "Show Romanization", this will display the Japanese with the Latin Alphabet.
The Latin alphabet varies in length, according to the language that uses it. If you mean the Latin version of the Latin Alphabet, it has 23 letters.
The classical Latin alphabet consists of 23 letters.
There are 23 letters in the original Latin Alphabet.
Shruti in latin letters is "Shruti"
There are 26 letters in the English version of the Latin alphabet.