Alphabetical writing.
No, they invented an alphabet, from which our alphabets of today have descended.
There is no ancient people that did this. While the Phoenicians developed an alphabet that gave rise to Hebrew, Greek, and Latin, the Phoenician alphabet is not still in use today.
It is a letter of their alphabet. We use it today as the letter T.
The alphabet we use today was based on the Phoenician alphabet system, passed to us via the Greek and Roman alphabets.
Apart from inscriptions, in the alphabets which took the Phoenician one and modified it for their own use. It was developed into Greek, Israel, Latin and to today's English and other European alphabets.
Yes, shadufs are still in use today.
The Phoenician alphabet was later adapted for use by several cultures, most notably the Greeks, who modified it to create their own writing system. This adaptation laid the foundation for the development of the Latin alphabet, which is widely used today. The simplicity and efficiency of the Phoenician script influenced various other writing systems throughout the Mediterranean and beyond.
The Greeks copied and adapted the Phoenician alphabet for their own use.
The 2 locks that are still in use today is the Poe and the MacArthur locks.!!
The Greeks adapted the Phoenician alphabet for their own communications.
Are ploughs and fallow land still use today
in the dark it make light