You can find the numbers in many different languages in the link below.
Chinese, Japanese and Korean all use Chinese characters for words, but each of these languages use them a bit differently. All three of these languages also can use Arabic numerals or Chinese characters to write numbers. Korean and Japanese languages share many commonalities in grammar and structure. Although Korean and Japanese use a lot of Chinese characters in writing, these two languages are drastically different from Chinese.
Spanish and French numbers are not the same, but do sound alike. This is because they are both Romance Languages.
The different alphabets of the world, are produced by the people who use them. Numbers are produced by those same people. Numbers are also used in languages that do not have alphabets.
Not at all. The class of "natural" numbers are all positive, but the classes of "real" numbers and "rational" numbers include negative numbers.
All the positive real numbers are natural numbers.
Yes, numbers are generally the same in all languages, but the way they are written and pronounced may vary.
All languages have numbers, and most languages of the world use an alphabet. There are too many to list.
No, not all languages use the same numerical system. Different languages may have different ways of representing numbers, such as different symbols or counting systems.
All numbers are used in all known languages, just spelt differntly, so no-one knows,sorry
Chinese, Japanese and Korean all use Chinese characters for words, but each of these languages use them a bit differently. All three of these languages also can use Arabic numerals or Chinese characters to write numbers. Korean and Japanese languages share many commonalities in grammar and structure. Although Korean and Japanese use a lot of Chinese characters in writing, these two languages are drastically different from Chinese.
"Languages" in French is "Langues". "All languages" is "Toutes les langues".
The European day of languages is to celebrate all the languages from all the countries in Europe.
most languages are similar in structure but have different rules about rhyme. -apex
In All Languages was created in 1987-02.
No, not all finite languages are regular.
No, not all regular languages are context-free. Regular languages are a subset of context-free languages, but there are context-free languages that are not regular.
Yes, according to the theory of formal languages, all finite languages are regular.