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Chinese and Japanese are different and totally unrelated languages. However, they use the same script. So, it wouldn't matter. The Korean language, another unrelated languages used to use the Chinese script but they have their own writing system now.
No, cuneiform script is no longer in everyday use. It was primarily used in ancient Mesopotamia to write several languages, including Sumerian and Akkadian. Today, the script is primarily studied by scholars and historians.
It is called Telugu script. Telugu script evolved from Brahmi script around 2500 years ago.
Hieratic script was a cursive writing system used in ancient Egypt for religious texts, administrative documents, and other day-to-day purposes. It was developed to be written quickly on papyrus or other surfaces, allowing scribes to be more efficient in record-keeping and correspondence.
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.
The vast majority of African languages use the Latin alphabet. Most of the remaining languages use the Arabic alphabet. There are a few native scripts, such as Amharic. Somali used to have a unique script, but today uses the Latin alphabet.
because hieratic script was an abbreviation of the hieroglyphics so it was faster to write and used less of their precious papyrus paper.
There are two languages on the Rosetta Stone, Egyptian and Greek, written in three scripts. The top characters incised on the stone are hieroglyphic, the script used for important or religious documents. Below that is the demotic form, the common script of Egypt, with the Greek translation at the bottom.
You need to be more specific. There are dozens (hundreds?) of scripting languages out there.
Hebrew and Aramaic.
java
java programming language cannot be used to write CGI scripts