Noun

Singular Latin alphabet

Plural countable and uncountable; plural Latin alphabets

Latin alphabet (countable and uncountable; plural Latin alphabets)

  1. (uncountable) The 26-letter alphabet consisting of the following letters (presented in majuscule and minuscule pairs):
    A a, B b, C c, D d, E e, F f, G g, H h, I i, J j, K k, L l, M m, N n, O o, P p, Q q, R r, S s, T t, U u, V v, W w, X x, Y y, Z z
  2. (countable) Any relatively minor variation of the 26-letter Latin alphabet.

From Wiktionary under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Wed Jan 27 18:58:56 2010

Middle Bronze Age 19 c. BCE

Meroitic 3 c. BCE Ogham 4 c. CE Hangul 1443 Zhuyin (Bopomofo) 1913 Complete writing systems genealogy This box:

The Latin alphabet, also called the Roman alphabet, is the most widely used alphabetic writing system in the world today. It evolved from the western variety of the Greek alphabet called the Cumaean alphabet, which was borrowed and modified by the Etruscans who ruled early Rome, which alphabet was then adapted and further modified by the ancient Romans to write the Latin language.

During the Middle Ages, it was adapted to the Romance languages, the direct descendants of Latin, as well as to the Celtic, Germanic, Baltic, and some Slavic languages, and finally to most of the languages of Europe.

With the age of colonialism and Christian evangelism, the Latin alphabet was spread overseas, and applied to Indigenous American, Indigenous Australian, Austronesian, East Asian, and African languages. More recently, western linguists have also tended to prefer the Latin alphabet or the International Phonetic Alphabet (itself largely based on the Latin alphabet) when transcribing or creating written standards for non-European languages, such as the African reference alphabet.

In modern usage, the term Latin alphabet is used for any direct derivation of the alphabet first used to write Latin. These variants may discard letters from the classical Roman script (like the Rotokas alphabet) or add new characters to it, as from the Danish and Norwegian alphabet. Letter shapes have changed over the centuries, including the creation of entirely new lower case characters.

From Wikipedia under the GNU Free Documentation License
Thu Feb 11 14:50:48 2010

Transliterating Cyrillic into Latin alphabet with T-SQL devioblog
devio.wordpress.com
Transliterating Cyrillic into Latin alphabet with T-SQL devioblog

devio

Sun, 13 Dec 2009 11:38:34 GM

First example is a translation table to convert the cyrillic . alphabet. into . Latin. . First we need to define the data and the translation tables using a case-sensitive cyrillic collation with collate cyrillic_Genera​l_CS_AS: ...

ICANN's introduction of non- Latin domains could earn phishers ...
geek.com
ICANN's introduction of non- Latin domains could earn phishers ...

John Brownlee

Mon, 04 Jan 2010 16:58:10 GM

Jan. 4, 2010 - A couple months ago, ICANN announced that they would finally extend the URL protocol to allow domain names that use non-. Latin alphabets. . This has wide.

How may we help you?: Cyrillic to Latin letters change...
community.wikidot.com
How may we help you?: Cyrillic to Latin letters change...

unknown

Fri, 08 Jan 2010 21:54:36 GM

Serbian language can be written in two . alphabets. Cyrillic and . Latin. letters. Both have 30 letters and letters are interchangeable​. Serbian language also has two dialects - ekavian and ijekavian. The difference is that some words ...

From Google Blog Search: "latin alphabet"
Tue Jan 19 05:05:20 2010

ABCing: Seeing the Alphabet Differently - Graphics.com
news.google.com
ABCing: Seeing the Alphabet Differently

Graphics.com

From abstract to zeitgeist, the book uses the Latin alphabet to introduce ways of visualizing, thinking and talking about art and design. ...
Vanes Survives Gut Check, And Knockdown: Tops Ouma - BoxingScene.com
news.google.com
Vanes Survives Gut Check, And Knockdown: Tops Ouma

BoxingScene.com

What figures to follow in the months to come is perhaps his first crack at alphabet glory. At whatever point his handlers decide he's ready for such an ...



and more »
Colllege hosts unity breakfast - BlueRidgeNow.com
news.google.com
Colllege hosts unity breakfast

BlueRidgeNow.com

Along with learning the fundamentals of the Italic alphabet , you will be exposed to ideas and practical applications of good lettering. ...

From Google News Search: "latin alphabet"
Sun Jan 17 17:44:31 2010

stencil alphabet latin jpg
laser-trafaret.ru
stencil alphabet latin jpg
424px x 600px | 41.60kB

[source page]

squegee pressure jpg 12 Jan 2006 15 18 18k stencil alphabet jpg 06 Jan 2006 14 34 25k stencil alphabet lat > 30 Jun 2006 14 05 42k stencil chip jpg 19 Mar 2007 15 55 14k

malte alphabet gif
tlfq.ulaval.ca
malte alphabet gif
214px x 588px | 5.80kB

[source page]

transcrit en alphabet latin complete C est aussi la langue nationale de Malte dont le pays constitue l un des rares ou l arabe est ecrit avec l alphabet latin Le digramme g indique une voyelle pharyngalisee elle apparait avant apres ou entre deux voyelles Les voyelles i et u = ou francais se diphtonguent apres

LATIN BACK3 jpg
kampo.co.jp
LATIN BACK3 jpg
392px x 567px | 229.90kB

[source page]



From Yahoo Image Search: "latin alphabet"
Tue Jan 5 21:11:37 2010

Why the US don't create its own alphabet, instead of using the latin alphabet?
Q. I mean, they have their own measure system, why not their own alphabet?
Asked by Gustavo CL - Tue Apr 24 23:12:50 2007 - - 10 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Umm Because the English alphabet is ... what it is? LOL @ America doesnt like to change. yeah, okay, they just changed the name of the most popular sport in the world to accomodate to their own sport, where the ball touches the foot once or twice in the entire game. And they changed their spelling from the Britain spelling. Yeah, not different at all. Haha.
Answered by j12 - Wed Apr 25 00:15:26 2007

Who thought the Turks should dress like westerners adopt the Latin alphabet attend state-run schools, and use?
Q. Hasan al-Banna Saad Zaghlul Ataturk or Ibn Saud
Asked by brhxnukka@ymail.com - Tue Nov 25 14:25:17 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Kamal Ataturk
Answered by Robert N - Tue Nov 25 14:35:32 2008

Was Estonian language ever written with an alphabet other then latin?
Q. Be it either officially or not... Maybe there was a standard cyrillic form for writing Estonian during soviet union? Or some ancient texts written with runes? or some gothic transliteration from Germans? Maybe Voro, Seto or other minority languages have had some different writing system? If so, where could I find info in English about it?
Asked by Jay jay - Sun Apr 5 21:15:05 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments

A. I can't find any evidence that Estonian was ever written in a script other than the Latin alphabet (with the addition of ae, oe, ue, and o, plus the later additions and .) Same for the minority languages.
Answered by wyoscot - Sun Apr 5 21:33:15 2009

From Yahoo Answer Search: "latin alphabet"
Fri Nov 20 23:40:23 2009