A sentence that contains all the letters of the alphabet without any repeats is called a "pangram." An example of a pangram is: "The quick brown fox jumps over a lazy dog." This sentence uses every letter of the alphabet exactly once.
A sentence that contains all 26 letters of the alphabet is known as a 'pangram'.
The letters that are repeated in the Spanish alphabet are "L", "A", "E", and "S."
The name for such a sentence is a pangram eg. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.Just recite the alphabet and point out each letter in the sentence, and you'll realise they're all included.
It is impossible to create a sentance with every letter used but not repeated. Of course, I'm just speaking in the english lanuage. You can always look up Panagrams, but they repeat letters. Sorry :-(
The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.It is called a Pangram.
The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.
Albanian Berber 19th Century Russian The Original Armenian alphabet.
There is no such language as Ourmukhi. If you are talking about the Gurmukhi alphabet, it's used to write the Punjabi language.
There is no English word that contains all 26 letters of the Alphabet.
The modern Russian alphabet is a variant of the Cyrillic alphabet and contains 33 letters.
It is incorrect. The sentence>> jackdaws love *MY* big sphinx of quartz would be the correct sentence to contain all the letters of the alphabet. The sentence given, contained *your*, which does not contain an *M*, the missing letter to make that sentence correctly display the English alphabet.
A pangram (sentence using all letters in the fewest letters possible) that makes sense is "The quick brown fox jumps over a lazy dog."