Arabic, Hebrew, Farsi, Dari, Pastoon, and Turkmen. If Chinese is printed vertically, it is read from top to bottom, starting from the right column and moving left. Thus, a vertically printed book in Chinese will open from the what is considered the back to readers of English and other languages in the roman alphabet.
the answer is 3. books are read from left to right, remember?
It depends on your personality: If you like to read, then books are fun to read. If you hate to read, then books are NOT fun to read. Personally, though, I adore books. I have a new one almost every day.
You can read the first chapter online. Libraries, Amazon.com, ebay.com, Christianbook.com are all great places. Excellent books!
The basics books to learn to read with would be the Dr. Seuss books. Some of them are more complex than others but if you look for the right ones, you can find ones that will really help you along the road to become a reader.
A student read half as many books during month B as she read during month A, and three times as many books during month C as she read during month B. If she read six books during month C, how many books did she read during month A?
Not to the Chinese! Traditional Chinese books (and therefore, Japanese) are written to be read top to bottom right to left. Books in the English and the Romance languages are read left to right and top to bottom.
For starters, the old language of China is read from right to left
Israel doesn't read. But a great majority of its population are educated, literate people ... the highest in that part of the world, in fact ... and there are a great many languages read by the people who live there. Some languages read from left to right, others read from right to left, and there are even a few that read from top to bottom. The languages that are spoken and read by the greatest number of people in Israel are the three official and semi-official languages of the country, and here are their directions: -- Arabic . . . . . official . . . . . right to left -- Hebrew. . . . official . . . . . right to left -- English . . . semi-official . . left to right
Languages that are read from left to right include English, French, German, Spanish, Italian, Russian, and many others.
Languages that use the Hebrew and Arabic alphabets are written from right to left.
An Arabic book is typically bound on the right side, as opposed to books in languages like English which are bound on the left. This orientation allows Arabic text to be read from right to left, which is the standard direction for Arabic writing.
Jewish people ... at least those who have learned to read ... read in the direction in which the material they're reading was printed. For example, when reading English, they read left to right. When reading Hebrew or Yiddish, they read right to left. When reading traditional Mandarin, they read vertically. Etc.
Reactants are on the left side, at least in languages read from left to right.
Most languages are read from left to right because this direction has become the standard over time. This direction is believed to have originated from the practice of writing on materials like papyrus or parchment, where it was easier to write left to right to avoid smudging ink.
Although Japanese people read books from right to left, they do not read books from the bottom to top.
Online and in many modern books, yes. The traditional way to read and write Chinese is top to bottom and then right to left.
cause if they were binded on the right we would have to read Japanese style books.