Want this question answered?
Because it gives other pertinent information necessary to depict the object. Our present alphabet of letters and numbers are influenced from ancient egyptian form of writing.
In the Spanish language, the word "letra" is a feminine noun which translates into the English language to mean letter, handwriting, lettering or lyrics.
There is no language that is considered to be the language of the Universe, unless you're talking about Mathematics.
sorry , can't answer it..
German is consider to be the language of science. Some also claim that it is the language that poetry is best expressed. And Germans call it the language of poets and thinkers. Where as French is considered to be a Romantic language; German is considered to be a Gothic language.
Because it gives other pertinent information necessary to depict the object. Our present alphabet of letters and numbers are influenced from ancient egyptian form of writing.
lettering is a grapheme (written character) in an alphapetic system and writing is a language in a textual medium trough the use of a set of signs or symbols
Yes, yes it is considered a language
Chinese has different sounds, lettering, and meanings to their writings. Japanese is the same way but Japanese do borrow the Chinese lettering from the Chinese and but the Japanese do have their own pronunciation for it. They are still different languages.
In the Spanish language, the word "letra" is a feminine noun which translates into the English language to mean letter, handwriting, lettering or lyrics.
Lettering is the art of making letters with the use of drawing or lettering instruments.... Lettering is the art of making letters with the use of drawing or lettering instruments....
Any language you learn after your first (native) language is considered a second language. There is no specific one.
There is no language that is considered to be the language of the Universe, unless you're talking about Mathematics.
meaning of principle of lettering
John Brinkley has written: 'Lettering today' -- subject(s): Lettering 'Lettering today' -- subject(s): Lettering
Most likely German
Yoshimasa Hirasawa has written: 'Retaringu hyakka' -- subject(s): Technique, Japanese language, Lettering, Calligraphy