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The first two letters of the Greek alphabet are "alpha" and "beta," so the word you're looking for is "alphabet."
The word alphabet is formed from alpha-beta, the first two letters of the Greek alphabet. So saying alphabet is pretty much the same as saying ABC.
The letter A is the first letter in the Latin alphabet. Its name in English is a (pronounced /eɪ/), plural aes, as, or a's. The first letter of the English Alphabet.
Ancient Greek. Alpha and Beta are the first two letters in the Greek Alphabet.
Beta in Greek is the second letter of the Greek alphabet. This is what is commonly known as letter 'b' in the English alphabet.
The Phoenicians created the first alphabet that is the basis for the modern alphabet.
Phoenician.
The Egyptian alphabet/language is one of the oldest known that has been recorded as of yet. The Greek alphabet is descendant of the Phoenician alphabet but the Greek alphabet is the first and oldest to record each consonant and vowel with a separate symbol.
The first vowel in the alphabet is "A."
The first letter in english alphabet is "A"
The first letter of the English alphabet is 'A'
There are no words in the alphabet. The alphabet consists of letters. ----- Or, if you mean the first word as in the one that is listed first in a dictionary, then I believe it's aardvark.
Yeah, A is the first letter of the alphabet!
no it wasn't it was the Greek alphabet that was the first
It is the Greek alphabet.
The first Alphabet was probably an Ancient Egyptian "Abjad" alphabet with 24 letters.
The first known alphabet was developed by the Phoenicians around 1200 BCE. This writing system, known as the Phoenician alphabet, consisted of 22 characters and significantly influenced later alphabets, including Greek and Latin. The Phoenicians were a maritime trading culture located in the region of present-day Lebanon and parts of Syria and Israel. Their alphabet allowed for greater communication and record-keeping in trade.