Afghanistan has two official languages, Pashto and Dari, but both of them use versions of the Perso-Arabic alphabet.
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There are no alphabets in any numbers. alphabets contain only letters (not numbers).
It depends on which alphabets you're comparing.
Generally speaking, no language uses more than 1 alphabet at any given time in its history. Rare exceptions occur where there are political divisions, such as Serbo-Croatian (which is the same language written with 2 different alphabets).
all alphabets can be written by hand.
There is never a case where two different alphabets are always written together. Each language uses its own alphabet.
Mongolia uses both Mongolian Script and the Cyrillic Alphabet.
Japanese has no alphabet. It uses two syllabaries (Katakana, Hiragana), and about 2000 Chinese characters (Kanji).
Yugoslavia used two alphabets: the Cyrillic and the Latin.
There is no language on Earth that uses 12 different alphabets. Most languages use only 1 alphabet, and a few use 2.
The Latin and the Cyrillic.
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Urdu uses a modified version of the Arabic alphabet.Hindi uses the Devanāgarī alphasyllabary (not actually an alphabet)
Hebrew uses the Hebrew alphabet, and Arabic uses the Arabic alphabet. Both alphabets are consonant-based.
Actually, there are two countries that begin with an A and don't end with an A:Azerbaijan and Afghanistan.Actually, there are two countries that begin with an A and don't end with an A: Azerbaijan and Afghanistan.
The world uses more than 10,000 phonetic symbols in all of the alphabets and syllabaries of every language. There are too many to list here. See related links for a great website.
Pashtoon and Dari are the common groups in afghanistan