The apostrophes when used in the Latin language serve many purposes. These apostrophes are punctuation marks that sometimes serve as diacritic marks that show possession.
The ancient Romans used the alphabet we use: the Latin alphabet. Latin was their language. Western languages have adopted and adapted the Latin alphabet.
If you are asking what alphabet was used in English prior to the Latin alphabet, the answer is none.
The Latin Alphabet (or more accurately "the English version of the Latin Alphabet")
the English alphabet stems from Latin
The Latin alphabet for English is the ONLY alphabet used in the British language.
The Latin alphabet is the most widly used in the Western Hemisphere.
They use the Latin alphabet; the same you and me use. It is called Latin because it was adapted and further modified by the ancient Romans to write the Latin language.
There is no such thing as a Roman language. The Romans were Latins, spoke in Latin ans used the Latin alphabet. 'a' is 'a' in Latin. English uses a modified version of the Latin alphabet
The Latin alphabet, which originally descended from the alphabet used by ancient Semites. See "alphabet" at Wikipedia.com
You don't. The Greek alphabet is quite different from the Latin alphabet (which is used for English).
There is only one alphabet used for English. It is called the Latin alphabet and it has 26 letters.
Both Etruscan and Latin alphabets were borrowed from the Greek alphabet with adaptations to suit the sound of their languages. Early Latin alphabets used some letters which were used by the Etruscans. Later, these letters were dropped and the Latin alphabet became a fully Latin adaptation of the Greek alphabet.