They will go home now.
Names aren't translated. If you're Ollie at home, then you're Ollie wherever you go - or as close as local pronounciation and the alphabet used allows. So in France, which uses the same alphabet, it's still Ollie, pure and simple.
yes. At home
Munsal (منزل)
each symbol of the phoenician alphabet represented a consonant.
Biglobe is a large internet service provider in Japan. It is possible to use a roman alphabet interface within it but basic home site and all connection links are in Japanese.
when are you coming home
Home language of 85% of world Muslims is not Arabic.
First, you decide which Arabic script you wish to use. Then you need a program which allows you to type in Arabic. In my word processor I can do that. I choose the type of Arabic in which I wish to write. My word processor has it by country. Most of Europe uses the Roman Alphabet. Some parts use the Cyrillic. Greece uses the Greek Alphabet. Arabic countries vary to a much greater extent. I choose the script that I wish to use. Then I choose the direction. Arabic is written from right to left. You can get a picture of a keyboard on the screen. You can cut out little pieces of paper and paste them over your keys so you have them on the proper keys. Then you type.
Hestia (Roman: Vesta) is the goddess of home and hearth in the Greco-Roman mythology.
bayt or al bayt.
I'd suggest you do a 'Get over it' spell or a 'forgive and forget' spell