"C" whilc sounds like 'sea'.
It's 'Ψ ψ'. It sounds like 'ps' on 'collapse'
A fun way to answer this is to ask a sister or brother to say the alphabet and see which letter sounds like a vegetable. Words that sound the same but are spelled differently and have different meanings are called homonyms. "Hair" and "hare", "fair" and "fare", "night" and "knight", "bury" and "berry" are homonyms. "P" is a letter that sounds like a vegetable - the pea.
okapi
Dee (Aberdeenshire, Wales and Cumbria & North Yorkshire) Exe (Devon) Eye (Leicestershire) Tees (County Durham/Yorkshire border, Teesdale) Wye (Wales, Herefordshire and the River Wye in Derbyshire and the one in Buckinghamshire)
queue (sounds like the letter q)
The letter s.
C sounds like sea
C (the letter sounds like "sea")
There is no "letter b" in the Hebrew alphabet, but there is a letter that sounds like 'b' and it is called Bet (בּ).
B It sounds like Bee and Bee like flowers
This sounds like an urban myth. No court can change the alphabet we use.
The word queue is pronounced as "q."
"C" whilc sounds like 'sea'.
It's 'Ψ ψ'. It sounds like 'ps' on 'collapse'
The Hebrew alphabet has a completely different system. It doesn't have a B, or a T, or any of the 26 letters of the English alphabet. It uses letters like ב and ת instead of English letters. Since X is s combination of two sounds, Hebrew can spell it with sounds from its alphabet: קסYou can just as easily ask why there is no letter ע in English.
The idea that anyone would sue to change the alphabet that we use sounds like an urban myth, since no court has the power to change the alphabet we use. The idea that the UCLA would do so sounds like a campaign of denigration. The answer is most certainly 'no'.