There are about 20 pure alphabets in common use, 30 if you include alphabets used only for religious purposes.
This number doesn't include other writing systems, like syllabaries (Japanese) alphasyllabies (Hindi), or Logographic writing (Chinese), but does include consonant-based alaphabets, called Abjads with optional vowels such as Hebrew and Arabic.
The most common pure alphabets used in the world are (in no particular order):
If you are talking only about pure alphabets with both consonants and vowels (not abjads or syllabaries), then there are about 20. If you include extinct alphabets and those used only for religion or decoration, there are about 40.
The most commonly used pure alphabets are:
It depends on your definition of the word alphabet, but in the broadest sense, there are 4 types of alphabets:
The Ancient Egyptian system is unique, and could be considered a 5th type because it uses a mixture of phonetic symbols and picture writing.
If you count each version of an alphabet as unique (for example, the English version of the Latin alphabet and the Spanish version of the Latin alphabet would be counted separately), then there are more than 100,000 alphabets. That number also includes alphabets of extinct languages.
If you are referring only to base alphabets, such as the Latin alphabet, the Cyrillic, Alphabet, etc, and you only include pure alphabets that represent both vowels and consonants, there are about 20. Notable examples are:
If you are talking about all currently used writing systems, there are about 100.
If you are talking only about pure alphabets with both consonants and vowels (not abjads or syllabaries), then there are about 20 in common use today. If you include extinct alphabets and those used only for religion or decoration, there are about 40.
The most commonly used pure alphabets are:
If you are talking about all writing systems, there are hundreds of unique systems.
There are about 20 pure alphabets in common use, 30 if you include alphabets used only for religious purposes.
This number doesn't include other writing systems, like syllabaries (Japanese) alphasyllabies (Hindi), or Logographic writing (Chinese), but does include consonant-based alaphabets, called Abjads with optional vowels such as Hebrew and Arabic.
The most common pure alphabets (representing more than 90% of all languages) used in the world are:
an alphabet is a set of letters. All alphabets are composed of letters.
There are no alphabets in any numbers. alphabets contain only letters (not numbers).
There are a few alphabets with 28 letters, most notably the Arabic alphabet.
You can't write alphabets in order but you can write letters in order.
They invented an alphabet from which developed the Greek and Roman alphabets, and hence today's alphabets.
8
49
ALL alphabets lack symmetry because they are composed of many different letters.
33 Letters
7
There are 24 letters In the Greek alphabe.
an alphabet is a set of letters. All alphabets are composed of letters.
7
If you are referring to sets of letters, then yes. But if you are referring to individual letters, they are called letters, not alphabets.
There are no alphabets in any numbers. alphabets contain only letters (not numbers).
There are a few alphabets with 28 letters, most notably the Arabic alphabet.
26 Letters of the Alphabets