No.
Hebrew names that begin with J, generally begin with Yod (י) in Hebrew.
For foreign words in Modern Hebrew, the letter Gimel (ג) which has the sound of hard G when followed by an apostrophe, becomse a J like the words Jungle, Jerome, Jelly, Gelatin.
The seventh letter Zayin (ז), when followed by an apostrophe, becomes equivalent to the French J, in words such as Jacques.
On a Mac, it makes the Greek alphabet letter "delta."
There is no such thing as a Jewish alphabet. If you mean Hebrew, there is no letter for J in Hebrew. In Modern Hebrew, words with the "J" sound are written with the letter for g plus an apostrophe: ג׳
C, J, Q (from the Greek letter Koppa, which later merged with Kappa), either U or Y (from the Greek letter Upsilon), V, and W.
Trick question - there is no letter J in the Greek alphabet - j is an English replacement of I, easier to say by non-Greeks, like Jason or Jupiter in Greek is Iason and Iupiter
The letter j is the tenth letter in the English alphabet.
ΣΕΝΝΙΦΕΡ Please note, however, that there is no "J" in the ancient greek alphabet, so it was replaced with the letter it would have been in ancient greek; "Sigma" or "S".
the last letter addded to the English alphabet was j the last letter addded to the English alphabet was j
The alphabet has 26 letters. The letter "K" comes after the letter "J".The English alphabet, in order:ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
The Fifth letter in Arabic alphabet is "ج" that equal to G or J in English langauge
J has never been the last letter of the Alphabet.
Considering that there is no "J" in the Greek Alphabet, my inclination would be to say "no".
You don't. The letter J does not translate to Greek, unless you use a dipthong of the letters D and Z to approximate the sound.