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The Latin alphabet, also called the Roman alphabet, is the most widely used alphabetic writing system in the world, the standard script of the English language and most of the languages of western and central Europe, and of those areas settled by Europeans. In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the Latin alphabet became the standard script for a number of non-European languages as well.

1 Letters of the alphabet

As used by the modern English language, it consists of the following characters:

1.1 Capital letters


A B C D E F G H I JJ is the tenth letter of the Latin alphabet. History J was originally only a capital letter, therefore, some people still write their names as Jsabel, Jnes instead of Isabel, Ines in the German-speaking world, and in Italy, in pre-modern use one also some KThe eleventh letter of the Latin alphabet, K comes from the Greek Κ or κ (Kappa) developed from the Semitic Kap, symbol for an open hand. The Semitic sound value /k/ was maintained in most Classic as well as Modern Languages, although Latin ab LL is the twelfth letter of the Latin alphabet. History The letter L is derived ultimately from the Semitic Lamed which stood for the phonetic value l as did the Greek letter Lambda Λ (upper case) or λ (lower case), as well as the equivalent MM is the thirteenth letter of the Latin alphabet. History The letter M represents the bilabial nasal consonant sound [m] in Classical languages as well as the modern languages. It derives its shape from the Greek Μ or μ. Semitic Mem originally pictu
NN is the fourteenth letter of the modern Latin alphabet. Semitic Nun was probably the picture of a snake; the sound value of the letter was /n/ as in Greek, Etruscan, Latin and all modern languages. Greek name: N, Ny. November represents the letter N in t OO is the fifteenth letter of the Latin alphabet. In Greek (Omikron), Etruscan and Latin O stood for the vowel /o/. Although Semitic 'Ajin was used in some alphabets to transcribe [o], the sound value was usually consonantic: [?/] (as the Arabic letter cal PP is the 16th letter of the Latin alphabet. Semitic Pe (mouth) as well as Greek Π or π ( Pi) and the Etruscan and Latin letters that developed from the former alphabet all symbolized /p/, a plosive, unvoiced consonant. Those who speak Arabic usually QQ is the 17th letter of the Latin alphabet. The Semitic sound value of Qop was /q/. In Greek this sign (called Qoppa in Greek) probably came to represent several labial plosives, among them /k_w/ and /k_w_h/. These sounds changed to /p/ and /p_h/ respecti R S T U V W X Y Z




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