a bé cé dé é effe gé hache i ji ka elle emme enne o pé ku erre es té u vé double-vé Ike i-grec zede
The Latin alphabet forms the basis of the English alphabet, it is the same alphabet, with the exceptions of J, U, and W.
the English alphabet stems from Latin
I suppose you mean the alphabet song. You can search for "chanson de l'alphabet" to hear it on YouTube or to find the lyrics. The lyrics are fair translations of the English song. It is basically the same song, just adapted to French, so the meaning is the same. There is no "abc" in French, only "alphabet". A book containing a method to learn the alphabet is called an "abécédaire".
French uses the same alphabet as English, but they just pronounce the names of the letters differenly. Instead of bring called "ay" it's called "ah"
The letter in the English alphabet that is wishbone-like is the letter "Y."
The French alphabet has 26 letters, just like the English alphabet. However, French includes accents on some letters, such as é, è, ê, and ç. Additionally, French does not use the letters W, K, or Y as frequently as English does.
The French alphabet has the same spelling than the English alphabet. You can hear it at: (link).
Same as the English alphabet with different pronunciations.
There are 26 letters in the French alphabet, the same number as in the English alphabet. The French alphabet uses the same Latin script as English, with additional accent marks on some letters such as é, è, à, and ç.
no its not so. yes its true that the alphabets appear same but they sound different. like in english 'a' is pronounced 'ay' but in french a is pronounced as 'une'
The Latin alphabet (The same as in the United States).
no
"zhay" does not exist in the French alphabet, the letter "z" is pronounced "zed".
The French alphabet is quite similar to the English one. There are some additional signs (mostly accents over existing letters) which help with the pronounciation.
More languages use or adapt the Arabic alphabet, including English, French and Esperanto, than any other alphabet.
Yes, both French and English use the same alphabet, with a few minor differences.
To put it simply.... Yes. Alphabet (French) is translated to English as the same word (alphabet). However along with all French word's.. there is different pronunciation. Alphabet in France is pronounced. "alpha-be". As you notice, you leave out the "t" (French people have to be complicated, :LL).