No. But there's a sentence that does. The Quick Brown Fox Jumped Over The Lazy Dog.
U cannot make a sentence with every letter of the alphabet
The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog
Uses every letter in the alphabet.
A sentence that contains each letter of the alphabet only once is called a perfect pangram. A pangram is a sentence containing every letter of the alphabet. As far as I know, in English, perfect pangrams can only be made by using abbreviations and/or very obscure words.
CA... California.
The Mexican alphabet. The Greek use the Greek alphabet. The Germans use the German alphabet. The French use the French alphabet. Etc.
In Latin, there is no J. Latin uses the letter I instead.
There isn't a word that uses every letter of the alphabet. The Guinness Book of World Records gives this as the shortest sentence to use all 26 letters "Mr Jock, T.V.Quiz Ph.D, bags few lynx."
There is only one English alphabet, and it cannot be translated into the Japanese alphabet because there is no such thing as a Japanese alphabet. Japanese uses syllabaries and picture-symbols in its writing.
Aksharam in Malayalam refers to a letter of the alphabet, as Malayalam is a language that uses a script with individual characters representing different sounds.
English uses the 26-letter Latin alphabet.
Chinese is not written in alphabet, although it uses alphabet to transcribe Mandarin sounds -- a system known as pinyin.