Ummm I don't know
It depends on which alphabet you are talking about: English: Q Greek: Rho (P) Hebrew: peh (פ)
There isn't an alphabet with origins from all three of those languages.
You don't. The Greek alphabet is quite different from the Latin alphabet (which is used for English).
We use the Latin alphabet, which was based on the Greek Alphabet, which was inspired by the Hebrew Alphabet.
Greek Hebrew Phoenician Egyptian and several others.
Ummm I don't know
It depends on which alphabet you are talking about: English: Q Greek: Rho (P) Hebrew: peh (פ)
One main difference between the Latin alphabet and the Greek alphabet is the set of characters they use. The Latin alphabet has 26 letters, including both uppercase and lowercase forms, while the Greek alphabet has 24 letters and does not distinguish between uppercase and lowercase forms in the same way. Additionally, the two alphabets have different origins and developed independently of each other.
The Cyrillic alphabet is derived from the Greek alphabet, with the addition of several characters from the Hebrew alphabet.
Depends on which Alphabet you are talking about: English: W Spanish: S Greek: ? Hebrew: (doesn't exist, there are only 22 letters) Russian: X
You don't. The Greek alphabet is quite different from the Latin alphabet (which is used for English).
There isn't an alphabet with origins from all three of those languages.
We use the Latin alphabet, which was based on the Greek Alphabet, which was inspired by the Hebrew Alphabet.
Greek Hebrew Phoenician Egyptian and several others.
It depends on which alphabet you are talking about. In English it is S In Greek it is T In Hebrew, ר (resh) In Russian it is C
Most of the letters of the world are not in the Hebrew alphabet. Only the following 22 letters are in it:א ב ג ד ה ו ז ח ט י כ ל מ נ ס ע פ צ ק ר ש תIf you are asking which English sounds don't exist in Hebrew, they are:most of the English vowels (Hebrew only has the vowel sounds: AH, EH, EE, OH, and OO)J sound only exists in Modern Hebrew in loan wordsCh sound only exists in Modern Hebrew in loan wordsng sound only exists in Modern Hebrew in loan wordsW sound may have existed in ancient Hebrew, but in Modern Hebrew it's only in a few loan words like "Washington"Th doesn't exist in Hebrew at allThe English R is not at all close to the Hebrew R
Nobody. English uses the Roman alphabet, which was inspired by the Greek alphabet.