The English alphabet is a modified version of the Latin alphabet also called the Roman alphabet. This was developed from the Greek alphabet and the letter 'Alpha' or 'A' is the first letter in the Greek alphabet so it carried over.
The first letter of the Arabic alphabet is "ا" which is pronounced as "alif". It is equivalent to the letter "A" in English.
The letter "i" in the Spanish alphabet is pronounced the same as the name of the letter "E" in the English alphabet.
the first letter in the Arabic alphabet is " 'alef " which is pronounced like the English "A" and looks like this >>> أhowever, alef is not considered a letter, it is a seat for the hamza, the little backwards 2 above it.
The Fifth letter in Arabic alphabet is "ج" that equal to G or J in English langauge
It is the same as in English "Z"
The first letter in english alphabet is "A"
The first letter of the English alphabet is 'A'
Yeah, A is the first letter of the alphabet!
The letter A is the first letter in the Latin alphabet. Its name in English is a (pronounced /eɪ/), plural aes, as, or a's. The first letter of the English Alphabet.
The A do the first letter of the English Alphabet.
There are no words in the alphabet. The alphabet consists of letters. ----- Or, if you mean the first word as in the one that is listed first in a dictionary, then I believe it's aardvark.
"A" is the first letter of the English alphabet and an indefinite article.
The alphabet has 26 letters. The letter "D" comes after the letter "C".The English alphabet, in order:ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
The alphabet has 26 letters. The letter "B" comes after the letter "A".The English alphabet, in order:ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
The alphabet has 26 letters. The letter "I" comes after the letter "J".The English alphabet, in order:ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
The alphabet has 26 letters. The letter "H" comes after the letter "I".The English alphabet, in order:ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
The Latin alphabet was first used for English around the 8th or 9th Century. The modern 26-Letter alphabet was in use by 1634.