Yes, it had the same alphabet as we do! ancient Rome introduced the form of lettering that we use today; that's how we came to have it!
Ancient Rome only had one alphabet: the Latin Alphabet. The alphabet with the most similarities at the time was the Greek Alphabet.
Rome did not introduce the Latin alphabet (the Romans were Latins). Ancient Roman civilisation ended about 1,000 years before the Discovery. What happened is that western European languages have adopted and modified the lain alphabet, including English language.
You use the Western alphabet and write in Italian for present day Rome. For ancient Rome, you use the western alphabet and write in Latin.
Trick question - there is no letter U in the Roman alphabet.
Rome has givein us our alphabet and much of ourspeaking . hopei helped some . :)
The ancient Romans used the alphabet we use: the Latin alphabet. Latin was their language. Western languages have adopted and adapted the Latin alphabet.
England, along with many other European countries, uses the Latin Alphabet, which in turn is a modified version of the Greek Alphabet used in Ancient Rome by the Eltruscans.
It is: ROMA We have the exact same alphabet as the ancient Romans.
Yes ancient Greece did have an alphabet
The Latin alphabet and Latin writing emerged in the early 7th century BC. The Latin alphabet was an adaptation of a version of the western Greek alphabet used in the Greek city of Cumae, near Naples. The Greeks had two types of alphabet, the western one and an eastern one. The western alphabet was introduced in Italy by Greeks who settled in southern Italy. It was adopted and adapted by all the native peoples of ancient Italy.
If you are asking which letters are not in the Ancient Hebrew alphabet, there are none. The Ancient Hebrew alphabet is identical to the Modern Hebrew alphabet.
France uses the Latin Alphabet first used in Ancient Rome by the Eltruscans. It is identical to the alphabet used in the English language but includes additional diacritics and ligatures above certain characters to accentuate tone.