There is so many different alphabets because there is so many different languages. Every language has a different alphabet. Even the English alphabet and the Spanish alphabet are different, even though not by much.
Every distinct alphabet on the planet is different from all other alphabets.
It became the basis for the Greek and Latin alphabets, and so today's alphabets.
If you are talking about a singular noun, the proper word is alphabet. For example, "I know the English alphabet." However, if you are talking about the plural noun, the word to use is alphabets. For example, "The alphabets of Spanish and German are somewhat different from that of English."
The Phoenician alphabet was the basis of the Greek and Roman alphabets, and so of today's alphabets.
There are no alphabets in any numbers. alphabets contain only letters (not numbers).
ALL alphabets lack symmetry because they are composed of many different letters.
It became the basis of the Greel and Latin alphabets, and so of our alphabets today.
There is no exact count, because it's hard to define what a fundamental difference is between alphabets, but a rough estimate is in the neighborhood of 100 natural alphabets, and thousands of constructed ones.
There are many alphabets used in Canada, but officially there are only 2: the English and French Alphabets.
Every distinct alphabet on the planet is different from all other alphabets.
India is the country with the most alphabets, though technically speaking, most of the languages of India are written with Abugidas, not alphabets.
There are hundreds of alphabets. If you're only talking about pure alphabets that include letters for vowels and consonants, the most common are:LatinGreekCyrillicKoreanArmenianGeorgianHebrew with nikkudArabic with tashkīl
They use different alphabets
It formed the basis of the Greek and Roman alphabets, and so our alphabets of today.
It became the basis for the Greek and Latin alphabets, and so today's alphabets.
It was adapted by the Greeks and Romans, and so has influenced today's alphabets.
No, as of 2013 there no such website.