alphabet
See also: Alphabet
English
Etymology
From Middle English alphabete, borrowed from Late Latin alphabētum, from Ancient Greek ἀλφάβητος (alphábētos), from ἄλφα (álpha), and βῆτα (bêta), the names of the first two letters of the Greek alphabet, Α (A) and Β (B), lowercase forms α and β. The Greek names derived from aleph, the name of the Phoenician letter 𐤀 (ʾ, “ox”) and beth, the name of the letter 𐤁 (b, “house”), so called because they were pictograms of those objects, having developed from the Egyptian hieroglyphs
(𓃾) and
(𓉐).
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Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈæl.fə.bɛt/
- (uncommon) IPA(key): /ˈæl.fə.bɪt/
Audio (US) (file) - Hyphenation: al‧pha‧bet
Noun
alphabet (plural alphabets)
- The set of letters used when writing in a language.
- The Greek alphabet has only twenty-four letters.
- In the first year of school, pupils are taught to recite the alphabet.
- A writing system in which letters represent phonemes. (Contrast e.g. logography, a writing system in which each character represents a word, and syllabary, in which each character represents a syllable.)
- (computer science) A typically finite set of distinguishable symbols.
- Let be a regular language over the alphabet .
- (India, Hong Kong, Singapore) An individual letter of an alphabet; an alphabetic character.
- 2002, Eugene E. Dike, African myth of creation in African form of writing, Monsenstein und Vannerdat, →ISBN, page 30:
- We realize the fact that the alphabet A has been used in many world scripts as a vowel with the others AEIOU.
- 2005, Satinder Bal Gupta, Comprehensive Discrete Mathematics & Structures, Laxmi Publications, page 237:
- There are 26 alphabets in English.
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- The simplest rudiments; elements.
- (Can we date this quote?), Macaulay, (Please provide the book title or journal name):
- The very alphabet of our law.
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Derived terms
→
- alphabetic, alphabetical
- alphabetize
- alphabet soup
- alphanumeric, alphanumerical
- Cyrillic alphabet
- Greek alphabet
- Latin alphabet
- Phoenician alphabet
- phonetic alphabet
- Roman alphabet
- Russian alphabet
- Ukrainian alphabet
Translations
an ordered set of letters used in a language
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See also
- syllabary
- writing system
- Appendix:Hebrew alphabet
Verb
alphabet (third-person singular simple present alphabets, present participle alphabeting, simple past and past participle alphabeted)
Synonyms
French
Etymology
From Late Latin alphabētum, from Ancient Greek ἀλφάβητος (alphábētos), from ἄλφα (álpha) (Α,α) and βῆτα (bêta) (Β,β) (the first two letters of the Greek alphabet), from Phoenician aleph 𐤀 (ʾ, “ox”) and beth 𐤁 (b, “house”), so called because they were pictograms of those objects, having developed from the Egyptian hieroglyphs
(𓃾) and
(𓉐).
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Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /al.fa.bɛ/
Audio (France) (file) - Rhymes: -ɛ
- Homophone: alphabets
Related terms
- alphabète
- alphabétique
- alphabétiquement
- inalphabète
Further reading
- “alphabet” in le Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Middle French
Etymology
From Late Latin alphabētum, from Ancient Greek ἀλφάβητος (alphábētos), from ἄλφα (álpha) (Α,α) and βῆτα (bêta) (Β,β) (the first two letters of the Greek alphabet), from Phoenician aleph 𐤀 (ʾ, “ox”) and beth 𐤁 (b, “house”), so called because they were pictograms of those objects, having developed from the Egyptian hieroglyphs
(𓃾) and
(𓉐).
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