The English Language uses the Roman Alphabet. Normally it is not noted when another language is written using the Roman Alphabet. Sometimes it is noted when referring to the Romanian Language. In Romania, the Roman Alphabet is used. In Moldavia, the Cyrillic Alphabet is used for the same language. Since all Western European Languages, except for Greek, use the Roman Alphabet, normally no one mentions it.
Japanese Letters are written in a different traditional style than the English language. Japanese is written in the roman alphabet and each letter stands for a sound. Japanese sentence structure is much different then the English structure.
The English alphabet came from the Latin alphabet, but there is no real reason why there are 26 letters, except to say that every written language has at least the minimum number of letters necessary to write the language.
the latin alphabet. there is no official swiss written language, the language "swiss" is a dialect of german and is only spoken. all the letters are identical to the alphabet used in the english language, with the exception of the following letters: ä, ö, ü
all of the written vowels in the Spanish alphabet also appear in the English alphabet.
Runic
The English language is written using the Latin alphabet.
The language of Australia for business and government is English. It is written with the English alphabet.
A. Vernon Harcourt has written: 'An English phonetic alphabet' -- subject(s): Accessible book 'An English phonetic alphabet' -- subject(s): Alphabet, Phonetics, English language
There is no alphabet in the Chinese language, unlike English or even Korean or Japanese (and even Korean and Japanese have no set order for their 'alphabet'), as Chinese language is simply written with different strokes put together. You might find websites that give you the way English alphabets might be written in Chinese, phonetic-wise, but that is only how we would pronounce English alphabets in Chinese phonetically, and not the Chinese alphabet. :)
Catherine Ferne has written: 'G sounds' -- subject(s): Consonants, Alphabet, Juvenile literature, English language 'B sounds' -- subject(s): Consonants, Alphabet, Juvenile literature, English language 'The letter T' -- subject(s): Consonants, Alphabet, Juvenile literature, English language
Elijah Hosford has written: 'Juvenile poems, or, The alphabet in verse' -- subject(s): Alphabet rhymes, Alphabet books, Alphabet, Juvenile literature, English language, Children's poetry, American 'Juvenile poems, or, The alphabet in verse' -- subject(s): Alphabet rhymes, Alphabet books, Alphabet, Juvenile literature, English language, Children's poetry, American
Francis A Cartier has written: 'The phonetic alphabet' -- subject(s): Phonetic alphabet, Phonetics, English language
Japanese Letters are written in a different traditional style than the English language. Japanese is written in the roman alphabet and each letter stands for a sound. Japanese sentence structure is much different then the English structure.
The English alphabet came from the Latin alphabet, but there is no real reason why there are 26 letters, except to say that every written language has at least the minimum number of letters necessary to write the language.
Yves Calarnou has written: 'Animalphabet' -- subject(s): Juvenile literature, Alphabet, French language, English language
Standard English 26-letter alphabet is used in new Zealand. Maori language is now written using the English alphabet but consisting of only fifteen characters.
As far as the military is concerned, a High Level Language are those that are most distant from English. (For example, Korean is different from English in ways such as written alphabet, grammatical patterns, and sentence structure, so it is in the highest language category the military has.)