Modern Hindi is written in Devanagari script and the standard Hindi alphabet, as agreed by the Government of India, has 11 vowels and 35 consonants = 46 characters.
Note however that there are many other languages spoken in India.
There are no words in the hindi alphabet - rather there are individual letters comprising consonants and vowels as well as combined letters called conjunctions.
There is only 1 Hindi alphabet. In total, it contains 52 letters . 10-vowels, 2-modfiers, 40-consonants.
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.
It is an alphabet that was created for s specific language, and not borrowed from another language.
well, i suppose a cavemans grunt could be classed as language, and its doubtful they had an alphabet. so yes, language probably came before the alphabet
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.
no. It uses the Latin Alphabet.
Languages with alphabets, usually have only one alphabet. There are a few exceptions, when a language is used in more than one country, for example: Hindi is written with the Devanāgarī alphabet in India, and with the Arabic alphabet in Pakistan (where it's called Urdu).
what we call our alphabet in the English language the Hindu language uses what they categorize their alphabet to be is the Devanagari which is made up of horizontal lines over certian letters.
The Hindi alphabet consists of 11 vowels and 33 consonants. Vowels include अ, आ, इ, ई, उ, ऊ, ऋ, ए, ऐ, ओ, and औ. Consonants include क, ख, ग, घ, ङ, च, छ, ज, झ, ञ, ट, ठ, ड, ढ, ण, त, थ, द, ध, न, प, फ, ब, भ, म, य, र, ल, व, श, ष, स, ह.
In Hindi, this number would be read as "Ek Arab Terais Sau Bawan Pachis Padma Padma Padma."
Rupert Snell has written: 'The Eighty-Four Hymns of Hita Harivamsa' 'Beginner's Hindi script' -- subject- s -: Alphabet, Devanagari alphabet, English, Hindi language, Self-instruction, Textbooks for foreign speakers, Writing 'Teach Yourself Beginner's Hindi' 'Teach Yourself Beginner's Hindi' 'Hindi and English dictionary' -- subject- s -: Dictionaries, English, English language, Hindi, Hindi language 'Teach Yourself Hindi Dictionary' 'Teach Yourself Beginner's Hindi Script'
The Hindi version of this number is similar to that of the English language.
The Japanese language has three writing systems: kanji, hiragana, and katakana. Kanji are characters borrowed from Chinese, hiragana is used for native Japanese words and grammatical elements, and katakana is used for foreign words and emphasis.
There is a common misconception that Urdu formed from the merging of Persian, Hindi, and Arabic; however, this is not true.Urdu is a dialect of Hindi, that is written with the Arabic alphabet and contains some loanwords from Arabic and Persian. But it is still an Indic language.
The Hindi alphabet, also known as Devanagari script, is not attributed to a single inventor. It has evolved over centuries from the Brahmi script and has been influenced by various cultures and languages. The script as we know it today emerged around the 11th century AD.
The difficulty of learning a language depends on a variety of factors beyond just its language family and script. However, in general, learning a non-Indo-European language like Turkish may present different challenges due to its unique grammar, syntax, and vocabulary compared to an Indo-European language like Hindi. Having the same alphabet can make learning Turkish somewhat easier in terms of reading and writing, but mastering a language involves more than just the script.
I'm not sure if this is what you mean, but in Hindi, shell is spelled with very different letters, not the English alphabet. It is pronounced Khōla. To say it, use this : Koel (like Noel, but with a K)
there is no 'Hindi' alphabet. it's called 'devnagari' - it is the sanskrit script used to write several, but not all Indian languages, Hindi being one of them. See link for more.