Alphabet
The alphabet or abece is a sequence of letters, each corresponding to a sue on the top. The word "Abece" consists of the first three letters of the Turkish alphabet. Similarly, the word "alphabet" that comes from the French word "Alphabet" comes from the reading of the first two letters "alpha" and "beta" in ancient Greek. The Turkish alphabet contains 29 letters: A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, Ş, T, U, Ü, V, Y, Z. The languages are divided into two according to their writing style; ▪ Alphabet-based languages "phonograms" Each member of the alphabet does not usually have a meaning, it only specifies the sound that needs to be extracted and only gets a meaning when it comes alongside the other letters. The vast majority of languages in the world are written using phonograms. ▪ languages that use ideograms - in general languages - in general, each symbol defines an object and, as a rule, very few definitions are expressed with two or more characters. Example: Chinese, Japanese.