There is no such thing as an Egyptian alphabet, so you cannot compare the two. Ancient Egyptian used thousands of pictures that represented ideas as well as consonants. The Arabic alphabet consists of 28 consonants.
There are no similarities, except that Egyptian was occasionally written right to left, just as Arabic is.
A modified version of the Arabic alphabet is used for Persian. It is the 28 letters of the Arabic alphabet, plus 4 additional letters used only in Persian.
There are many differences. Here are a few: Arabic letters are connected. Latin letters are not. Arabic is written right-to-left. Latin is written left-to-write. The Arabic alphabet has no vowels. Latin does.
No. It is based on the Greek alphabet.
There are a few alphabets with 28 letters, most notably the Arabic alphabet.
no. It uses the Latin Alphabet.
The Egyptian dialect of Arabic is written with the standard Arabic alphabet.
There are 28 letters in the Arabic alphabet.
the second letter in Arabic alphabet is(ب)
The first letter in the Arabic alphabet is called "alif". It's written like this in Arabic: أ
Egyptian Arabic is used in Egypt.
The Islamic alphabet is Urdu.
There are 28 letters in the Arabic alphabet--Lebanese is a dialect of Arabic, and all of the Arabic dialects have the same letters.
The Fifth letter in Arabic alphabet is "ج" that equal to G or J in English langauge
A modified version of the Arabic alphabet is used for Persian. It is the 28 letters of the Arabic alphabet, plus 4 additional letters used only in Persian.
There are many differences. Here are a few: Arabic letters are connected. Latin letters are not. Arabic is written right-to-left. Latin is written left-to-write. The Arabic alphabet has no vowels. Latin does.
Hebrew uses the Hebrew alphabet, and Arabic uses the Arabic alphabet. Both alphabets are consonant-based.
No. It is based on the Greek alphabet.