I think you're thinking of the Rosetta Stone, which has only three languages on it, one being classical Greek, the others being two different forms of Egyptian hieroglyphics.
No, numbers are not written the same in every language. Different languages may use different symbols or characters to represent numbers.
Arabic is the official language in every North African country.
No, the term "hellilula" is not the same in every language. It is not a universally recognized word and may have different meanings or translations depending on the language.
No, not every language has its own sign language. Sign languages are unique and separate from spoken languages, and different countries may have their own sign languages.
Arabic is an official language in North African countries.
In almost every language it is called opera.
No, numbers are not written the same in every language. Different languages may use different symbols or characters to represent numbers.
The original bible was first written in the greek language. It was then translated into every language in the world. And it is the most sold book in the world.
it was first written in ancient Hebrew an it is now written in almost every language in the world including most dead languages such as Latin.
No. Operas have been written in virtually every language.
The Bible at first was printed in Latin, but then was translated into German, and then every language across Europe.
English is used in almost every part of the world.
I am sorry, but I do not think anybody will be able to answer this one............
You can find carved pumpkins at many craft stores. These pumpkins will be artificial but good for every year! The only thing is, carving pumpkins is fun!
The glossary is written in aproximatly every language there is in America, if it was outside of America(united states) then those are the languages we wouldn't have
There are no sounds found in every language.
No, not every finite language is regular.