Western Europe primarily uses the Latin alphabet, which consists of 26 letters from A to Z. This alphabet is the most widely used writing system in the world and serves as the basis for many languages in the region, including English, French, Spanish, and German. Variations may include additional diacritics and letters in certain languages, such as ñ in Spanish or ç in French.
You use the Western alphabet and write in Italian for present day Rome. For ancient Rome, you use the western alphabet and write in Latin.
The same most western nations use: the Latin Alphabet (A B C D...)
== == By the time of the Archaic Period, the Greeks had lost the use of Linear-B. Following the resumption of trade with the Middle East, they adopted the Phoenicean alphabet which, with some modifications, is still used to write Greek. The Greek alphabet was, in turn, eventually adapted to become the Roman alphabet. The spread of the Roman Empire brought literacy and learning to all parts of the empire, some of which did not already have forms of writing. Latin became the language of choice throughout the western empire, although Greek remained the everyday language and the language of learning in the east. During the Middle Ages, the eveyday Latin dialects began to diverge into the Romantic languages, but retained the use of the Latin alphabet. Following the fall of the Roman Empire, countries in north-western Europe adopted the languages of their conquerors but retained the Latin alphabet. Gradually the Latin alphabet came to dominate throughout western Europe, although the Greek alphabet remained dominant in the east.
The majority of languages in the world with an alphabet are based on the Latin alphabet. Virtually all of the countries of North America, South America, Australia, and Western Europe use the Latin Alphabet. A Notable exception is Greece, which uses the Greek alphabet.
Western Europe is far more developed, less corruptable (though this is not to say Eastern Europe is corruptable, just less than Western Europe), and less powerful (economically wise and most likely military wise as well). Western Europe has also been more involved in foreign affairs in the global world.
The ancient Romans used the alphabet we use: the Latin alphabet. Latin was their language. Western languages have adopted and adapted the Latin alphabet.
Farming. I think.
The Etruscan adopted a version of the western Greek alphabet in use in the Greek city of Capua (near Naples). They adapted it to the phonetic characteristics of their language, therefore creating an Etruscan alphabet.
No influence whatsoever, apart from the fact that modern alphabets originate from the Phoenician alphabet. The Greeks modelled their alphabet on that of the Phoenicians. The Latins adopted and adapted the western Greek alphabet. We use an adapted form of the Latin alphabet.
More or less, one what you ask is the Eastern Block, but Eastern Europe is not the same (Poland, Hungary, Czech Republic, Slovakia were part of Soviet bloc but they are in Central Europe never Eastern one.) Eastern countries use Cyrillic-based alphabet and used to be related with Byzantine-Russian culture when Western/Central countries use Latin-based alphabet and were more related with Roman culture.
Answer: Western Slavs, unlike the other two groups, are Roman Catholic. They also use the Roman alphabet while eastern and southern Slavs (with the exception of Slovenes, Croats, and Bosniaks) use the Cyrillic alphabet.
The Mexican alphabet. The Greek use the Greek alphabet. The Germans use the German alphabet. The French use the French alphabet. Etc.