Yes, Dari is written from left to right, similar to English. It uses a variant of the Persian script, which is an abjad that primarily consists of consonants, with vowels typically represented by diacritics. This left-to-right orientation is consistent with other languages that use the Persian script.
Persian Farsi and Dari are both written from right to left as well.
Arabic people read from right to left. The Arabic script is written horizontally from right to left.
Arabic, Hebrew, Farsi, Dari, Pastoon, and Turkmen. If Chinese is printed vertically, it is read from top to bottom, starting from the right column and moving left. Thus, a vertically printed book in Chinese will open from the what is considered the back to readers of English and other languages in the roman alphabet.
The word that can be read the same way from left to right and from right to left is "radar."
The Hmong Pahawh is written from left to right and is also read from left to right.
Left to right.
You read from left to right in English;)
No, Arabic is read from right to left, opposite to the English language which reads from left to right. Each word is formed from right to left, and sentences are also written and read in that direction.
Palindrome.
left to right
The only manga that read from left to right are "manga" originally published in a language that's read from left to right (i.e., English,) and Japanese manga that are "flipped" by a publisher for publication in a language that's read from left to right. Even "modern" Japanese manga are read from right to left.
Sanskrit is typically read from left to right, just like English. Each line of text is read horizontally, starting from the left. There is no tradition of reading Sanskrit vertically or from right to left.