Hebrew uses the Hebrew alphabet, and Arabic uses the Arabic alphabet. Both alphabets are consonant-based.
David used Hebrew. The Arabic language did not yet exist in 1000 BCE.
No. Hebrew doesn't use symbols. It uses letters. "Lily" in Hebrew letters is לילי
Israel uses the Hebrew alphabet for the Hebrew language, the Arabic alphabet for the Arabic language, and the Latin alphabet for the English languages. Signs in all three languages can be found throughout Israel.
(stylized characters) Hebrew uses the Hebrew alphabet, a block-letter alphabet, which consists of 22 consonants and no vowels. Arabic uses the Arabic alphabet, a cursive-style alphabet, which consists of 28 consonants (29 if you include Hamza), and no vowels. Most of the letters of of the Hebrew alphabet have similar names to their Arabic equivalents. Some of the emphatic letters of Arabic are missing in Hebrew, and the Hebrew letter Samech (ס) is missing from Arabic.
No. Turkish has numerous loanwords from Arabic, but does not use Arabic grammar, Arabic base-words, Arabic letters (such as gutturals or emphatics), and retains many unique, Altaic properties such as agglutination.
Semetic languages include Hebrew, Arabic, and Aramaic and certain ancient languages such as Phoenician and Akkadian.Semetic can refer to peoples who speak the Semetic languages, especially Hebrew and Arabic.
Hebrew doesn't use symbols. It uses letters. "Randy" in Hebrew letters is ראנדי
Arabic-speaking countries use Arabic as their written language.
The Hebrew language doesn't use symbols. It uses letters and words. the phrase "blessing from heaven" is ברכה מהשם (brakha mehashem).
Hebrew doesn't use symbols. It uses letters. "Samuel" in Hebrew letters is שמואל
Hebrew is a language with an alphabet. There's no "symbol" for family. If you would like to know how to write/say the word family in Hebrew, it is: mishpacha - משפחה
Arabic Language.