Rhyme scheme.
We use the Latin alphabet, which was based on the Greek Alphabet, which was inspired by the Hebrew Alphabet.
It's really not similar at all. The Phoenician alphabet has 22 consonants and no vowels. The only similarity is that the English alphabet is a version of the Latin alphabet which was adapted from the Greek alphabet alphabet which was adapted from the Phoenician alphabet.
If you are asking what alphabet was used in English prior to the Latin alphabet, the answer is none.
The Greek alphabet, an evolution of the Phoenician. An evolution of the Greek alphabet was the Latin.
Rhyme scheme.
The American Standard Code for Information Interchange is a character-encoding scheme based on the ordering of the English alphabet.
The rhyme scheme for a poem is usually denoted by assigning a different letter of the alphabet to each new rhyme. If "A red hat" were a couplet, the rhyme scheme would be AA.
The rhyme scheme of a poem refers to the pattern of rhyming words at the end of each line. It is represented using letters to indicate which lines rhyme with each other. For example, a simple rhyme scheme could be AABB, where the first and second lines rhyme with each other, and the third and fourth lines rhyme with each other. More complex rhyme schemes can include ABAB, ABBA, or even variations within a single poem.
We use the Latin alphabet, which was based on the Greek Alphabet, which was inspired by the Hebrew Alphabet.
The Greek alphabet was based on the Phoenician alphabet.
The Phoenician alphabet was the inspiration for the Greek alphabet.
The Cyrillic alphabet is derived from the Greek alphabet, with the addition of several characters from the Hebrew alphabet.
Rhyme scheme is the pattern of rhymes at the end of each line in a poem or song. It is identified by assigning a different letter of the alphabet to each new rhyme. For example, a rhyming pattern of AABB would indicate that the first two lines rhyme with each other, and the next two lines rhyme with each other.
The Phoenician Alphabet
There is no Roman alphabet. It's called the Latin alphabet, and yes, the Romanian alphabet is a variety of the Latin alphabet, just as English is.
Usually, letters of the alphabet are used to represent the rhyme scheme in a poem. Each end rhyme is given a different letter, starting with "A" for the first rhyme, "B" for the second rhyme, and so on. This allows the reader to easily identify the pattern of the rhymes throughout the poem.