Omega is the last letter of the Greek alphabet.
I think it's the Greek letter omega
The Latin letter a came from the first letter of the Greek alphabet (alpha) which came from the first letter of the Phoenician alphabet (alef), but nobody knows why alef is the first letter of the Phoenician alphabet.
Θ, θ [theta, pronounced as "th" in "think"]
Q... what did you think it was? F?
The first written alphabet was invented in Sumer (Mesopotamia) around 4000BC. Other cultures had hiroglyphics, but an actual alphabet is Sumerian. The English type of letters are Greek.
People sometimes use greek alphabet letters like "Alfa" "Beta" "Delta" "Omega". If you like those that's fine. But I think it should just be a fake name. Something not so obviously "Spy talk" but something accually secret.
This is not of greek origin, i think it comes from the latin corpus.
I am guessing that what you think is an eight is really the symbol for Ohms which is the Greek Omega. So it would be 1,000 Ohms.
in the greek alphabet the letter P is the same as the pi symbol...i think
Hieroglyphics have one set of characters (among many) that represent phonetic consonant sounds, similar to the Latin alphabet. The difference is, the Hieroglyphic "alphabet" has no vowels, other than semivowels such as W and Y. The Hieroglyphic alphabet also contains a set of characters that each represent 2 consonants, and another set that represent 3 consonants. There are also thousands of characters that represent whole words.
Nothing. It is the first letter in the Greek Alphabet. It is correct that alpha is the first letter in the Greek Alphabet. For some reason, people doing research on sleep have defined the activity of the alert, awake brain as "beta waves". Then when in a relaxed or dreaming state, the brain produces "alpha waves". Deeper sleep is characterized by theta waves, and the deepest sleep produces delta waves. So from this perspective, beta comes before alpha. But be ready to explain, because people will think you are wrong.
"Se agapao". This is the anglicised version. I don't have access to a greek alphabet on this screen Σ'αγαπώ i think this one is right...