Oder
urdu
Pisa
Answer: EURO ( used in most of Europe).
Oh, dude, I got you! So, like, first up, we've got "French," which is like, the language of love and croissants, you know? And then there's "Swedish," the language that sounds like you're trying to speak with a mouthful of meatballs. So, there you have it, two European languages with six letters each!
The Euro doesn't have an abbreviation (it is only 4 letters!), but it does have a symbol: '€'.
The language that is not an Indo-European language is Japanese.
The Armenian language has 38 letters.
Russian is an indo-european language so it's easier to learn for a speaker of another indo-european language (such as English) than for example Finnish or Japanese. The letters (alphabet) are different but once you learn to read them it's not all that far off.
The Tamil language has 247 letters in its alphabet.
In European motor terminal boxes these are the identification letters of the motors coil ends. Connection to these letters are U - L1, V - L2 and W - L3.
in my opinion it is harder to learn a language like Turkish because since we have the same alphabet our letters make different sounds so you might get confused... and, I can speak Hindi, but I'm learning to write it... and since the letters are so different I do not get confused