Yugoslavia used two alphabets: the Cyrillic and the Latin.
Yugoslavia no longer exists. When the country existed there were about 6 national languages (depending on how you define a language) and 2 alphabets. The alphabets are the Latin Alphabet (as used in English: ABCD, etc.) and the Cyrillic Alphabet (like the alphabet used in Russia and Bulgaria). The Cyrillic Alphabet was manily used by people in Serbia and Macedonia.
There are many alphabets used in Canada, but officially there are only 2: the English and French Alphabets.
Khitan and Jurchen
There are no alphabets in any numbers. alphabets contain only letters (not numbers).
It depends on which alphabets you're comparing.
The two largest ethnic groups in Yugoslavia were the Serbs and the Croats.
There is no language on Earth that uses 12 different alphabets. Most languages use only 1 alphabet, and a few use 2.
Alphabets only have 1 or 2 cases. Latin, Greek, Armenian, and Cyrillic have upper and lower cases. Hebrew and Arabic have only one case.
there are 29,27,and 26 alphabets
all alphabets can be written by hand.
alphabets or all alphabets have I's in it
It depends on how far back you go, but the first alphabets had no vowels, and no standardized spelling.