As of the 21st Century, more than 1000 Languages use variations of the Latin alphabet, including:
as of the 21st Century, more than 1000 Languages use variations of the Latin alphabet.
The Latin alphabet evolved from the Etruscan alphabet, which was used by the ancient Etruscan civilization in what is now modern-day Italy. The Etruscans, in turn, borrowed the alphabet from the Greek alphabet, which had been developed by the ancient Greeks. The Latin alphabet was later adapted and expanded by the Romans and became the basis for many modern alphabets, including English.
It became the basis of the Greel and Latin alphabets, and so of our alphabets today.
One. The English version of the Latin Alphabet.
Yugoslavia used two alphabets: the Cyrillic and the Latin.
In the Latin, Greek, and Cyrillic alphabets, ALL OTHER LETTERS come after the letter A.
It became the basis for the Greek and Latin alphabets, and so today's alphabets.
Alphabets only have 1 or 2 cases. Latin, Greek, Armenian, and Cyrillic have upper and lower cases. Hebrew and Arabic have only one case.
The Latin and the Cyrillic.
The Phoenicians - through Greek and LAtin, it is the basis of today's alphabets.
latin probably
If you are talking about the letters of the words "PAN no", there is only one alphabet used: the Latin alphabet.
Good question, but no. Both languages derive from Latin and are from the Italic language family, thus there are many similarities between the two.