The persian alphabet is in only one language: Persian.
It is an adaptation of the Arabic alphabet with some extra letters for sounds that don't occur in Arabic.
The Persian alphabet is used to write Persian (Farsi), as well as several other languages in Iran and neighboring countries. Some of these languages include Dari, Tajik, Kurdish, Balochi, and Pashto.
The majority of languages in the world with an alphabet are based on the Latin alphabet. Virtually all of the countries of North America, South America, Australia, and Western Europe use the Latin Alphabet. A Notable exception is Greece, which uses the Greek alphabet.
Languages that use the Roman alphabet are typically referred to as "Latin script languages" or "Roman script languages." This system of writing is based on the Latin alphabet and is widely used around the world for various languages, including English, Spanish, French, and many others.
Some languages that are written from right to left include Arabic, Hebrew, and Persian.
The alphabet commonly used in many Slavic languages is the Cyrillic alphabet. It consists of around 30 characters and is used in languages such as Russian, Bulgarian, Serbian and Ukrainian.
The Cyrillic alphabet is used for many languages of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union, including Russian, Ukrainian, Belorussian (Belarusian), Serbian, Macedonian and Bulgarian, as well as Mongolian. During the Soviet period, most of the Soviet republics used the Cyrillic alphabet for their national languages; since the breakup of the Soviet Union, some of those languages have switched to the Latin alphabet (Azerbaijani, Moldovan, Turkmen and Uzbek), while others have stayed with the Cyrillic alphabet (Kazakh, Kyrgyz and Tajik). Many of the minority languages in Russia are also written in the Cyrillic alphabet.
A modified version of the Arabic alphabet is used for Persian. It is the 28 letters of the Arabic alphabet, plus 4 additional letters used only in Persian.
There isn't an alphabet with origins from all three of those languages.
All languages that use the Latin alphabet have the letter A, which is more than 1000 languages. There is also a very similar looking letter in both the Cyrillic alphabet and the Greek alphabet.
The majority of languages in the world with an alphabet are based on the Latin alphabet. Virtually all of the countries of North America, South America, Australia, and Western Europe use the Latin Alphabet. A Notable exception is Greece, which uses the Greek alphabet.
Most of the languages on Earth are NOT written with the Latin alphabet, including:ArabicBengaliChineseDzongkhaEtruscanFaliscanGeorgianHebrewIngushJapaneseKoreanLaoMalayalamNabataeanOriyaPersianQashqaiRussianSinhalaThaiUrduVaiWestern Neo-AramaicXamtangaYiddish
All languages have numbers, and most languages of the world use an alphabet. There are too many to list.
Yes, most languages of India are descended from Indo-European, as is Persian.
In Persian ( Farsi ) we say : Abi ---- or in Persian alphabet : آبی
Israel uses the Hebrew alphabet for the Hebrew language, the Arabic alphabet for the Arabic language, and the Latin alphabet for the English languages. Signs in all three languages can be found throughout Israel.
There is no English alphabet: English is written with the Latin alphabet. as of the 21st Century, more languages use Latin-based alphabets than any other (more than 1000 languages).
Arabic and Persian
The same kind as all romance languages have...the Latin Alphabet.