Three indicates ع, while three with an apostrophe stands for غ. 5 or 7' indicate خ, while 7 stands for ح.
9 = ص (Saad)
The Arabic letter غ (Arabic: غَيْنْ ghayn or ġayn) is the nineteenth letter of the Arabic alphabet, one of the six letters not in the twenty-two akin to the Phoenician alphabet (the others being thāʼ, khāʼ, dhāl, ḍād, ẓāʼ), it represents the sound /ɣ/ or /ʁ/. In name and shape, it is a variant of ʻayn (ع).
For example, the numeral "3" is used to represent the Arabic letter ⟨ع⟩ (ʿayn)—note the choice of a visually similar character, with the numeral resembling a mirrored version of the Arabic letter. Many users of mobile phones and computers use Arabish even though their system is capable of displaying Arabic script.
ݐ (Unicode name: Arabic Letter Beh With Three Dots Horizontally Below) is an additional letter of the Arabic script, used in some African languages such as Fulfulde. It is equivalent to the Latin letter Ƴ ƴ.
The Roman numerals are used to symbolize the Arabic letters which don't exist, or rather, the ones that have no phonetic equivalent in English. For e.g., the Arabic letter “ح” (Haa) can't be accurately represented with Latin characters and it is, therefore, represented by the number “7”.
ق / ق / ق / ق • (qāf) The twenty-first letter of the Arabic alphabet. It is preceded by ف (f) and followed by ك (k).
Ve (based on name of the letter ف fāʾ) ڤ is a letter of the Arabic-based Kurdish, Comoro, Wakhi, and Karakhanid alphabets.
١ one, ٢ two, ٣ three, ٤ four, ٥ five, ٦ six, ٧ seven, ٨ eight, ٩ nine, ١٠ ten.
Arabic Alphabet: /Saad/ ص
Three indicates ع, while three with an apostrophe stands for غ. 5 or 7' indicate خ, while 7 stands for ح.
أ,ب,ت,ث ج,ح,خ,د,ذ,ر,ز,س,ش,ص,ض,ط,ظ,ع,غ,ف,ق,ك,ل,م,ن,هـ,و,ي Shazly.
The name refers to the arabic root related to dust since the forms of the numerals were easy to erase during intermediate accounting and scientific calculations on a pre-dusted tablet. Arabic numerals were introduced to Europe in the 12th and 13th centuries via scientific texts imported from Andalusia (Al Andalus).
الحُروف الأَبْجَديّة {noun} ABC (also: the letters of the alphabet)