No.
However there are some experts who know how to read cuneiform (and thus write it too). Modern methods of writing are far more efficient than cuneiform (which was good when all you had to write on was damp clay tablets).
No, cuneiform is an ancient system of writing that was primarily used by the ancient civilizations of Mesopotamia. It is no longer in use today but is studied by scholars for historical and linguistic purposes.
No, people in Mesopotamia do not still use cuneiform. Cuneiform was a writing system used by ancient Mesopotamian civilizations such as the Sumerians, Babylonians, and Assyrians. It has been largely replaced by alphabetic systems.
Oh, dude, cuneiform is so last millennium! We don't really use it nowadays unless you're planning a time-traveling trip back to ancient Mesopotamia. It's like asking if we still ride dinosaurs to work - fun to think about, but definitely not a part of our modern routine.
The system of writing developed by the Sumerians was called Cuneiform.
The writing in Babylon was the cuneiform writing.
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the form of writing is called cuneiform, it used wedge-shaped symbols called pictographs meaning pictures or drawings that represents a word or idea
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It was called cuneiform, and was written with a stylus that was triangular in cross section, so as it was pressed into soft clay it made "letters" composed of triangular strokes. The clay tablets would be fired into hardness when done to preserve them, and so we still have some intact examples today.