alphabet 100%
There is no alphabet in the Chinese language. Chinese is written with thousands of characters that represent whole words and ideas. Children are taught to memorize these characters in school, however due to the number of characters, illiteracy is a big problem in China.
The play is written in English so he obviously speaks English. With very few exceptions, all the characters in Shakespeare's plays speak English, whether they are French, Italian, Austrian, Egyptian, or Welsh. The exceptions are the one scene in Henry V written in French and a few lines in Latin (like "Et tu Brute")ANS 2 - I beleive Othello speaks in Danish. Just because the play is written in English, does nor mean that is the language of the characters.
Egyptians
the original language was French
French
Rusi Guang has written: 'Chinese characters' -- subject(s): Chinese language, Writing 'Chinese wit, wisdom and written characters' -- subject(s): Chinese language, Writing
Written Spanish has certain characters that have accent marks over the standard English alphabet. These accent marks are added to reflect more faithfully the actual pronunciation of the words concerned.
The written language in China is Mandarin, which uses Chinese characters. The Huang He is also known as the Yellow River in English.
In Chinese, the word "language" is spelled as "语言" (yǔyán).
Japanese
There are more than 50,000 characters in the Chinese language, but around 20,000 are commonly used. Each character represents a syllable or concept rather than a single letter, as in the English alphabet.
Japanese language uses 2 alphabets (hiragana and katakana) in addition to more complex characters that are derived from the Chinese written language. Kanji (Japanese characters) are the same as Chinese characters.
John Jing-hua Yin has written: 'Fundamentals of Chinese characters' -- subject(s): Chinese language, Chinese characters, Writing
Hongyuan Wang has written: 'Zi li qian kun' -- subject(s): Etymology, Chinese characters, Chinese language 'Han zi zi yuan ru men =' -- subject(s): Etymology, Chinese language
James Dowden Bruner has written: 'The phonology of the Pistojese dialect ..' -- subject(s): Dialects, Italian language 'Studies in Victor Hugo's dramatic characters' -- subject(s): Characters, Characters and characteristics in literature
Bernard Vannier has written: 'L' inscription du corps' -- subject(s): Characters, Characters and characteristics in literature, French language, Literary style, Semiotics and literature, Style
Depends on the language. Hebrew is written one way, Arabic another. Writing the language means writing it in its own characters.