Alphabet in a sentence as a noun

Having an alphabet, as it does, Korean indeed isnt hard to learn to read and write.

'I Personally think it helps them with speech, learning to say words, and the alphabet,' she said.

Noise is like a stream of random symbols from an alphabet - anything is possible; most all of it boring.

She clips a lot of coupons, so she keeps them in one of those index files with a slot for each letter of the alphabet, by product name.

On the left half there are only 9 keys, but each letter of the alphabet can be written with those 9 keys because it's context sensitive.

There are legitimate secrets that are worth that kind of hassle, and then there are the other 90% of stuff that the alphabet soup of agencies does.

From the first day of training they gave us sheet of paper with the alphabet and the morse translation and told us to memorize a couple of letters.

This article is akin to complaining that the letters of the alphabet or the spelling of words don't represent their sound or meaning well.

I would argue that is was almost inevitable that this would happen in a country with either the Latin or Cyrilic alphabets.

When I first started the project, I could barely write the Greek alphabet, didn't understand what each letter sounded like, and had no knowledge of the language's grammar.

Had he done an alphabet reform instead---adding a few letters to the Arabic alphabet to make it a better fit for Turkish---and accompanied it with the same literacy policy, it'd do just as well.

Alphabet definitions

noun

a character set that includes letters and is used to write a language

noun

the elementary stages of any subject (usually plural); "he mastered only the rudiments of geometry"

See also: rudiment ABC's ABCs