The alphabet song is:
A-B-C-D-E-F-G...H-I-J-K-LMNOP...Q-R-S...T-U-V...W-X...Y and Z
Now I know my A-B-C's, next time won't you sing with me!
You don't. The Greek alphabet is quite different from the Latin alphabet (which is used for English).
The alphabet has 26 letters. The letter "D" comes after the letter "C".The English alphabet, in order:ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
No one discovered the English alphabet. It was invented by Catholic monks who adapted the Latin alphabet to fit English.
The Latin alphabet of Rome had 23 letters, and the English alphabet uses 26 letters.
All English speakers use the English version of the Latin Alphabet.
The Latin Alphabet formed the basis for the English alphabet.
The first letter in english alphabet is "A"
You don't. The Greek alphabet is quite different from the Latin alphabet (which is used for English).
Nobody. English uses the Roman alphabet, which was inspired by the Greek alphabet.
You memorize all alphabets in the same way -- by repeating them over and over until you remember them. Think about the Alphabet Song you used to learn the English alphabet and you'll have an idea how to get started on repeating!
The alphabet has 26 letters. The letter "D" comes after the letter "C".The English alphabet, in order:ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
The Latin alphabet forms the basis of the English alphabet, it is the same alphabet, with the exceptions of J, U, and W.
No one discovered the English alphabet. It was invented by Catholic monks who adapted the Latin alphabet to fit English.
Both English and Albanian use versions of the Latin alphabet.
the English alphabet stems from Latin
There are 26 letters in the English alphabet.
I suppose you mean the alphabet song. You can search for "chanson de l'alphabet" to hear it on YouTube or to find the lyrics. The lyrics are fair translations of the English song. It is basically the same song, just adapted to French, so the meaning is the same. There is no "abc" in French, only "alphabet". A book containing a method to learn the alphabet is called an "abécédaire".