German
There really isn't any special written form of Swiss German, even though you'll sometimes see Swiss writing in an informal approximation of their dialect. Officially, they use the regular German spelling.So here's the answer in standard German: Viel Spaß im Urlaub!
the latin alphabet. there is no official swiss written language, the language "swiss" is a dialect of german and is only spoken. all the letters are identical to the alphabet used in the english language, with the exception of the following letters: ä, ö, ü
There is no "Swiss language". Swiss people either speak German, French, Italian, or Rhaeto-Romansch. The language you would use would depend on which canton you are visiting. German: dein Freund French: ton ami Italian: tuo amico
A writer may use various types of language depending on the context and purpose of their writing. This could include formal language for academic or professional writing, informal language for personal or creative writing, technical language for specialized fields, or figurative language to create vivid imagery or emotional impact. The choice of language helps convey the tone, style, and message of the writing.
no!!! jUST USE THE CORRECT TECHNICAL LANGUAGE.
by language and writing
No, the Korean language does not use kanji characters in its writing system. Instead, Korean uses a unique writing system called Hangul, which was created in the 15th century.
Algebra is not affected by language. It is almost always done in writing.
No, they just used it and according to the Hammurabi code it was alright to use it. If the Sumerians had not invented writing and language the Akkadians would have.
No, they just used it and according to the Hammurabi code it was alright to use it. If the Sumerians had not invented writing and language the Akkadians would have.
They didn't have a 'Roman' language; they spoke and wrote Latin...
It doesn't make much sense to have 'Swiss' as certificate for a language... in Switzerland German, french, Italian and the latin based rumantsch are official languages. While rumantsch is 100% Swiss only, the other three exist in Swiss dialect forms. Although official writtings now use the 'real' German, french, Italian people speak the dialects... Swiss Italian with one to one latin parts and Swiss German beeing a form of medieval German... If someone looks for certain documents in different languages in Switzerland, the person will see that there is never a Swiss flag. German documents show Germany's flag, french papers the drapeau of France and the Italian ones the tricolore of Italy. If Swiss people call their language 'Swiss', they mainly think of Swiss German... as Swiss french is closer to the 'real' french, and Swiss Italian is often called 'ticinese' (as that's the main region where people speak Swiss Italian). But overall there is no 'Swiss' only used for one language...