Are all car number plates in the world written using 'our' number and letters?
What will we do, when it gets to the point that we have to make the combinations so long that the digits won't fit onto the back of a car? or by that time will something either have replaced the car or a new kind of number plate will have been invented?
If you work it out, it doesn't take many letter/number combinations to give a huge number of variations. The current system will last for quite a few years yet.
And I suspect that for instance Arabic speaking countries may well use their own alphabets. I may be wrong of course. However, I see cars from all over Europe where I live and they all use our alphabet/number system.
Different countries use different sequences, in the Arab countries they use the original Arab numerals on their plates as well as "our" numbers. Have a look here, it gives you sample places from most of the countries in the world, quite interesting! http://www.numberplat...es/Saudi%20Arabia.asp
jonny, I know my parents current car's, their previous cars and my dad's works van number plate, i'm useless at remembering codes and stuff, I know my home number and mobile number and noone elses . . . .
:/ . . . . . . . Would a jaguar car with the last three digits of it's number plate as J4G probably be personalised and say the owner was called Tom, could have the nuymber as T0M5 JAG ? considering i didn't see the first few digits, or could it just be a coincidence that it was a jag with jag in the reg number?
no Chinese ones or Saudi ones use their respective scripts - and I would guess in N Korea, they use only their script, if there are any cars! If I remember right, S Korea uses both systems