Want this question answered?
Not really, no. The First modern, fully alphabetic writing system (including vowels) was the Greek alphabet, which was inspired by the Phoenician alphabet, which only had consonants.
This question makes no sense. There is only 1 Hebrew language, and it has only one Alphabet: the Hebrew alphabet.
There isn't an alphabet with origins from all three of those languages.
Egyptian, Hebrew, and Greek
Egyptian, Hebrew, and Greek
Greek Hebrew Phoenician Egyptian and several others.
By symbols from older languages such as Hebrew and Egyptian changing and morphing. Look at the "Naked Archaeoligist" episode on Alphabet. (it has nothing to do with nudity)
The Hebrew alphabet was borrowed from the Phoenicians.
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.
The Cyrillic alphabet was primarily a combination of the Greek and Glagolitic alphabets, with some elements borrowed from the Hebrew alphabet. This combination was created by Saints Cyril and Methodius in the 9th century for the purpose of translating religious texts into Slavic languages.
There is no letter A in the Hebrew alphabet. In fact, the Hebrew alphabet doesn't have any vowels in it at all.To form vowels in Hebrew, marks are added to the letters. For example:A as in make = אֵיA as in Father = אָ אַ or אֲA as in cat = doesn't exist in Hebrew
The Hebrew alphabet is not divided into parts.