The Greek alphabet was based on the Phoenician alphabet.
The Phoenician alphabet was the inspiration for the Greek alphabet.
The Cyrillic alphabet is derived from the Greek alphabet, with the addition of several characters from the Hebrew alphabet.
The Greek alphabet, an evolution of the Phoenician. An evolution of the Greek alphabet was the Latin.
The Phoenician alphabet was the basis for the Hebrew alphabet as well as the Greek alphabet. The Phoenician alphabet developed from the Proto-Canaanite alphabet, during the 15th century BCE. Before that, the Phoenicians wrote with a cuneiform script.
The Byzantine empire wrote in the Greek alphabet and literature, but had a few contributors: Greek(of course), Christian, Roman, and Oriental.
Americans use the Latin Alphabet, which was directly influenced and based on the Greek Alphabet.
You don't. The Greek alphabet is quite different from the Latin alphabet (which is used for English).
One main difference between the Latin alphabet and the Greek alphabet is the set of characters they use. The Latin alphabet has 26 letters, including both uppercase and lowercase forms, while the Greek alphabet has 24 letters and does not distinguish between uppercase and lowercase forms in the same way. Additionally, the two alphabets have different origins and developed independently of each other.
The Phoenician Alphabet
They have an alphabet
Yes. Our alphabet is quite similar to the greek alphabet. In fact, the word Alphabet comes from "Alpha" and "Beta", the first two letters of the greek alphabet.