No.
"Capital" letters, different in form from their lower case equivalents, are only found in languages written in the Roman and Greek alphabets and their derivatives, such as Cyrillic. Examples of languages without capital letters are: Hebrew Arabic Chinese Japanese Korean Lao Thai Hindi Bengali Gujarati Punjabi Sinhala Burmese
Capital letters are also known as uppercase letters and are typically used at the beginning of sentences, proper nouns, and the pronoun "I." They are larger in size compared to lowercase letters and are often used to draw attention and for emphasis in writing. In some languages, the use of capital letters has specific rules governed by grammar and punctuation.
Though they are not really "letters" but instead characters, the Asian languages such as Chinese have the most characters, hence making it one of the hardest languages to learn.
Latin and German are western languages, so they use letters just like how we write English. Japanese, Chinese and Arabic are eastern languages, so instead of using letters, they use characters that consists of strokes.
Unlike Western languages like French, German, and English, Chinese does not have an alphabet. Written Chinese doesn't have letters that spell out words. Instead, it has characters that represent the different words of the language. The character for "open" is 開. In Simplified Chinese this is written 开.
Chinese, unlike Western languages like English, French, and German, does not have an alphabet and letters. Instead, it has something known as a "character system" that is composed of thousands of different symbols (known as characters) that each have a different pronunciation. So, rather than spelling with letters, Chinese write characters.
Yes, many countries have keyboards with letters specific to their language. For example, countries that use the Cyrillic alphabet have keyboards with those letters. Similarly, countries with languages like Chinese or Japanese have keyboards that accommodate their characters.
The four official languages of Singapore are: Malay, English, Tamil, and Chinese.
Some examples of languages that do not use alphabets include Chinese, Japanese, and Korean, which use characters or symbols instead of letters. Additionally, languages like Arabic and Hebrew use scripts with characters representing sounds rather than individual letters.
There is a total of 29 Chinese languages.
Hunanese, Jiangxinese and Mandarin are chinese languages.
Fiji has four letters and its capital, Suva has four letters. :) Peru; capital is Lima Togo; capital is Lomé