The Latin alphabet forms the basis of the English alphabet, it is the same alphabet, with the exceptions of J, U, and W.
Misrofont alphabet is an alphabet wich has extremely small font
Cyrillic alphabet
"Native alphabet" is a phrase that refers to your native language. If you speak English, your native alphabet is the Latin alphabet.
The alphabet B (as in 'bee')
Old Permic alphabet was created in 1372.
The Ancient Greek alphabet is over 2,500 years old
They made modifications to the old Phoenician alphabet.
No.
The letter "A" is the first letter in the alphabet for a reason. The alphabet was 24 letters long 5,000 years go. I belive that A was in the alphabet in the exact place as today. (if not it's still 5,000 years old.)
Well, there is the futhark, the old alphabet of the Runes. But way back then there wasn't really a Norway, so calling it Norwegian is stretching it a bit.
Old English borrowed the Latin alphabet (which we use today) around the 9th Century.
Runic
In about the 9th Century, Old English switched from the Futhark Alphabet to the Latin alphabet, which is what we use today.
he was 7 yrs. old
colonized by muslims some of their old churches and old structures has arabic alphabet on the walls.
Old to Gold Dirty OLD coin Old Gold The difference is G.