Irish is written with a modified Latin alphabet similar to the one used for Scottish Gaelic, though a spelling reform in 1957 eliminated some of the silent letters which are still used in Scottish Gaelic:
A a B b C c D d E e F f G g H h I i
L l M m N n O o P p R r S s T t U u
The letters j, k, q, v, w, x, y, and z only appear in English loanwords.
no. there is no 'k' in the Irish language alphabet
there is no letter "Q" in the Irish language alphabet
If you mean the Irish (Gaelic) it is not in that language. Irish has neither 'k' nor 'y' in its alphabet.
ó m'anam. The Irish language uses the standard Latin alphabet, though with accents.
Ireland is an English-speaking country, so it uses the alphabet that has x in it. The Irish language does not use x.
One is a Latin language, the other is a Slav language, one uses the Latin alphabet, the other the Cyrillic alphabet, and the grammar and vocabulary have little in common!
Is le Gael mo chroí Gaelach Irish uses the Latin alphabet
aibítir
The Irish alphabet, also known as the Gaelic alphabet, consists of 18 letters.
The language with the smallest alphabet is probably Rotokas, a language spoken in Papua New Guinea, which has only 12 letters in its alphabet.
It is an alphabet that was created for s specific language, and not borrowed from another language.
Irish uses the latin alphabet minus the letters j, k, q, v, w, x, y, z.