All alphabets are written in symbols. The Hebrew symbols are just different from the English symbols.
No, the chemical symbols for elements are internationally standardized and do not vary with different languages and alphabets. They typically consist of one or two letters derived from the element's name in English or Latin.
There are complete alphabets (like Latin, Greek, or Cyrillic).There are abjads (alphabets with only consonants, such as Hebrew)There are abugidas, which are segmental writing systems in which consonant–vowel sequences are written as a unitThere are syllabaries (alphabet-like symbols that represent whole syllables, like Japanese katakana).
There is no language called Israeli. People speak Hebrew and they write using Hebrew alphabets.
Some examples of languages that do not use alphabets include Chinese, Japanese, and Korean, which use characters or symbols instead of letters. Additionally, languages like Arabic and Hebrew use scripts with characters representing sounds rather than individual letters.
No. Some alphabets, such as Arabic and Hebrew, don't even have the letter A.Here are some starting letters of alphabets that do not start with A:Hebrew = אarabic = اSyriac = ܐKorean = ㄱ
Hebrew doesn't have symbols. It has letters. Mark is spelled מארק
Hebrew uses the Hebrew alphabet, and Arabic uses the Arabic alphabet. Both alphabets are consonant-based.
Hebrew doesn't use symbols. It uses letters. "Randy" in Hebrew letters is ראנדי
The world uses more than 10,000 phonetic symbols in all of the alphabets and syllabaries of every language. There are too many to list here. See related links for a great website.
Hebrew doesn't have symbols. It has letters. Joseph is spelled יוסף (pronounced Yosef).
Hebrew doesn't have symbols. It has letters. My father's love = אהבת אבי