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The formal date of when J was created remains unknown. What we do know is that in the 17th century, I and J were distinguished from each other and then began to be used commonly in the English language.The letter J is the 10th letter in the alphabet.
the last letter addded to the English alphabet was j the last letter addded to the English alphabet was j
J has never been the last letter of the Alphabet.
In Latin, there is no J. Latin uses the letter I instead.
The alphabet has 26 letters. The letter "K" comes after the letter "J".The English alphabet, in order:ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
none
no
j
If you are using lower case letters, the only letter with exactly two lines of symmetry (out of a b c d e f g h y o u j k l) is l.c and k have one line of symmetry.o has many, many lines of symmetry.H has two lines of symmetry (but lowercase h has none).A B D E Y and U all have one line of symmetry.
No. Examples of shapes without lines of symmetry include a scalene triangle, a parallelogram, the capital letters F and J.
the numbers tht do not have line of symmetry are f ,g,j,l,n,p,q,r,s,,x,z.
Four. F, G, J, L
Q r f g j l p
CAPITAL LETTERS: F, G, J, N, P, Q, R, S, Z these may or may not have: B, K, L small letters: a, b, d, e, f, g, h, j, k, p, q, r, s Note: db and qp can have a line of symmetry between the letters
Possibly the letters with no lines of symmetry.
ALL letters have at least one line of rotational symmetry. However - if you mean reflective symmetry, the letters F, G, J, L, P, Q, R, S, & Z do not.
O,z,i,x,h Not true. Only the letter O. h has no lines of symmetry unless capitalised; i and x have one. When capitalised, all three have two lines of symmetry, not MORE THAN 2. z has none, so I am not sure what it is doing in this list.