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alphabets

An alphabet is a set of letters used to represent the basic sounds of a language in written form. In most alphabets, each letter corresponds to a phoneme, and the letters are arranged in a conventional order. Alphabets are distinct from abjads, which mainly represent consonants; abugidas, where consonants carry vowel markings; and syllabaries, where each symbol stands for a syllable.

The earliest widely influential alphabet is the Phoenician script, used around the eastern Mediterranean in the

Other notable alphabets include Hebrew and Arabic scripts (often classified as abjads), and regional alphabets such

1st
millennium
BCE.
It
inspired
the
Greek
alphabet,
which
introduced
explicit
vowel
letters.
The
Greek
legacy
gave
rise
to
the
Latin
alphabet,
spread
with
the
Roman
Empire
and
becoming
the
basis
for
many
languages,
including
English.
The
Cyrillic
alphabet,
developed
in
the
First
Bulgarian
Empire
in
the
9th
century,
adapted
Greek
letters
for
Slavic
languages
and
became
prominent
in
Eastern
Europe
and
northern
Asia.
Hangul,
created
in
Korea
in
the
15th
century,
is
a
distinctive
writing
system
that
encodes
spoken
sounds
with
a
featural
design;
it
is
sometimes
described
as
an
alphabet
due
to
its
clear
separation
of
letters
for
vowels
and
consonants.
as
Armenian,
Georgian,
and
Devanagari
(an
abugida).
In
modern
usage,
alphabets
vary
in
the
number
of
letters,
case
distinctions,
and
the
use
of
diacritics.
Writing
direction
also
differs,
with
Latin
and
Cyrillic
typically
left-to-right,
and
Hebrew
and
Arabic
right-to-left.
Digital
text
relies
on
Unicode
to
encode
the
diverse
set
of
alphabetic
scripts
worldwide.