Egyptian scribes usually wrote on papyrus with reed brushes dipped in ink. The ancient Egyptians made ink by grinding brightly colored minerals into powder, then mixing the powder with liquid so that it was easier to apply.
Scribes typically used a material called papyrus, which was made from the pith of the papyrus plant. The pith was cut into strips, soaked in water, and then pressed and dried to create a writing surface. Alternatively, parchment, made from animal skin, was also a common writing material used by scribes.
Notepads were used by scribes in ancient Rome. They were clay and not paper.
this is not an answer scott
When the scribes ran out of paper and walls to write on, they used a slaves gouch and was killed and placed up-side down so people could read of his gouch.
No, scribes did not only use the Cyrillic alphabet. Scribes used a variety of writing systems depending on the time period and region they were in. In addition to Cyrillic, other alphabets such as Latin, Greek, and Hebrew were also commonly used by scribes.
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Cuneiform
In ancient Egypt, scribes recorded trading systems. It usually took about 4-5 years to become a scribe, and it was very difficult. Scribes would use reeds as pens or pencils, and they would dip it in ink. The people who became scribes were the children of the scribes. Scribes were usually men, but there might have been some women.
clay
they used them for writing.they are not word they are pictures
they use to brush thier teeth with chairs