Technically, there is no such thing as the American alphabet, but the English language does use the Roman alphabet.
American (and British) English use the Roman alphabet, which the Romans develope from the Greek alphabet, and the Greeks in turn based their alphabet on various existing alphabets in use in the Mediterranean. So, many, many people have been at work on it over the centuries. In other words, nobdy sat down and invented the alphabet.
The letter "Z" has its origins in the Phoenician alphabet, where it was represented by the symbol "zayin." It was adopted into the Greek alphabet as "zeta," and later made its way into the Latin alphabet used by the Romans. Z became a distinct letter in the Latin alphabet around the 1st century BCE, solidifying its place in written language as we know it today.
"Theta" is a letter in the Greek alphabet. In fact, it is the eighth letter in the alphabet. It was originally derived from teth, a Hebrew letter.
It's neither. Both the phrases "A-Z alphabet" and "A-Z alphabets" don't make any sense in English.
The letter "Q" was in the 17th position in the alphabet.
i
t is the 20th letter of the English alphabet.
The seventeenth letter of the alphabet is the letter "Q."
q=qubec
The alphabet has 26 letters. The letter "R" comes after the letter "Q".The English alphabet, in order:ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
The Russian alphabet has no Q
No.....
Answer:Letters or words? Q is the only letter of it's kind in the alphabet. Answer:There is only one Q in the alphabet, there are no other q's.
Q... what did you think it was? F?
ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOP Q RSTUVWXYZ. One.
There is no Q in the alphabettical order