Greek Hebrew Phoenician Egyptian and several others.
Israel has two official languages ... Hebrew and Arabic. In addition, English is taught in all Israeli school, is widely spoken, and enjoys a semi-official social and diplomatic status. Most city-street signs and highway-information signs in the country are printed in all three of those languages. -- Hebrew is written in the Hebrew alphabet. -- Arabic is written in the Arabic alphabet -- English is written in the English alphabet. In addition to these official and widely-spoken languages in Israel, the population has roots in more than 130 countries, and a huge number of those languages are spoken in many homes and ethnic enclaves.
the alphabets of all European languages are desended from the Phoenician alphabet. Hebrew is believed to be very similar to Phoenician. Michael Montagne
Absolutely not. Each one has a different amount of letters. English uses the Latin alphabet. Hawaiian has a 12 letter alphabet and so on. Some languages such as Russian, Hebrew, Arabic use alphabets with different characters from the Latin alphabet.
We use the Latin alphabet, which was based on the Greek Alphabet, which was inspired by the Hebrew Alphabet.
Egyptian, Hebrew, and Greek
Egyptian, Hebrew, and Greek
By symbols from older languages such as Hebrew and Egyptian changing and morphing. Look at the "Naked Archaeoligist" episode on Alphabet. (it has nothing to do with nudity)
The Cyrillic alphabet was primarily a combination of the Greek and Glagolitic alphabets, with some elements borrowed from the Hebrew alphabet. This combination was created by Saints Cyril and Methodius in the 9th century for the purpose of translating religious texts into Slavic languages.
Not really, no. The First modern, fully alphabetic writing system (including vowels) was the Greek alphabet, which was inspired by the Phoenician alphabet, which only had consonants.
This question makes no sense. There is only 1 Hebrew language, and it has only one Alphabet: the Hebrew alphabet.
Israel uses the Hebrew alphabet for the Hebrew language, the Arabic alphabet for the Arabic language, and the Latin alphabet for the English languages. Signs in all three languages can be found throughout Israel.
Greek Hebrew Phoenician Egyptian and several others.
They were all blended; Hebrew, Ethipoian, and Egyptian
The following are quite similar to Hebrew:AramaicCanaaniteAkkadianPhoenicianand to a lesser extent:ArabicMalteseAmharicAncient Egyptian
The Hebrew alphabet was borrowed from the Phoenicians.
It depends on which Jewish language you're talking about. Most, such as Hebrew and Yiddish, are written with the Hebrew alphabet. Some, such as Judezmo (also called Ladino), are more commonly written with the Latin alphabet.