Like Latin, Arabic script was used for many languages. Of these are Farsi, Urdu, Ottoman Turkish and many other Asian and Australasian languages. Most African languages were first written in Arabic. For a complete list see http://Arabic_alphabet#Languages_written_with_the_Arabic_alphabet
The Arabic alphabet has 28 consonants (29 if you include Hamza). There are also numerous "accent" marks that are sometimes included to indicate vowels and other information.
I don't know what you mean by this question, but Jawi script is the modified version of Arabic script to write Malay language. Meaning, there are some extra characters added and the vowels may not follow identical rules as arabic.
Quran was originally revealed in Arabic but its meaning can be translated into any & every other language.
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.
YES. Arabic is written from right to left. Most Semitic languages (other than those that use the Amharic Alphabet) are written from right to left, like Arabic, Hebrew, Aramaic, etc.
It's mainly Arabic, but it can be written in all other languages.
There is only 1 Arabic alphabet in use. It is used by other langugaes as well, such as Urdu and Persian.
More languages use or adapt the Arabic alphabet, including English, French and Esperanto, than any other alphabet.
Morris S. Seale has written: 'Qur'an and Bible' -- subject(s): Bible, Christianity, Christianity and other religions, Criticism, interpretation, Islam, Koran, Relation to the Bible, Relations 'A Grammar of Biblical Hebrew in Arabic' -- subject(s): Arabic language, Arabic language--Grammar, Hebrew language
Chinese include ( Japanese and Korean) + Arabic..obviously the alphabet AND the pronunciation are unbelievable !Answer PolishThere is no such thing. Language difficulty depends on the person. Other factors are the learner's native language and their familiarity with the target language's culture.
The dialect of Arabic used in Lebanon is a Semitic language like all other dialects of Arabic.
The alphabet used for English and many other Indo-European languages is the Roman alphabet. Other common alphabets are Cyrillic, Chinese, and Arabic.