A clay tablet is a thick piece of stone that humans inscribed messages upon. No paper or ink existed, and this was the most effective way to permanently record something.
I'm doing I'm doing I'm doing your mom
Nothing. Paper was unknown in ancient Greece.
Well, it is not able to be spelled on the computer because they wrote in cuneiform (q ney e form). Each letter was a series of wedges and lines. They wrote with a stylus (wedge-shaped) on a clay tablet. Look up cuneifrom to find out how to write it. It takes a long time doing it on paper with a pen, but it is even longer on the the clay tablet with a stylus. I did it in history. It took forever.
The writing system invented in ancient Mesopotamia was cuneiform. The Sumerians invented it more than 5000 years ago. It was written by making triangular marks on a clay tablet.
Cuneiform writing - wedge-shaped symbols made by making impressions in clay tablets and then baking the tablet like a brick - was invented by the Sumerians well over 4,000 years ago.
History does not record the name of the inventor of the clay tablet.
That is the correct spelling of tablet (writing pad, a block of stone or clay, or a medicinal pill).
A clay tablet is a thick piece of stone that humans inscribed messages upon. No paper or ink existed, and this was the most effective way to permanently record something.
Paper had not been invented and clay was the only thing used.
The first tablets were made of clay and used for writing in Sumeria.
The oldest prescription drug was a clay tablet in the Middle East. The tablet was used sometime in the Third Millennium B.C. in Mesopotamia.
I'm doing I'm doing I'm doing your mom
a skill would be studing his clay or stone tablet.
4000 b.C.
They Contributed is the Clay Tablet, Ziggurats, and Records
Clay tablets were typically written on using a stylus, a sharp instrument that would create impressions in the soft clay. The writer would press the stylus into the clay to form wedge-shaped characters, creating cuneiform script. Once the tablet dried and hardened, the writing would be preserved.
The first clay tablets were likely made by ancient civilizations by taking wet clay, shaping it into a flat surface, and then inscribing marks or symbols using a stylus or similar tool. After the inscriptions were made, the clay tablets would be dried or fired to harden them for preservation. These tablets were then used for writing, record-keeping, and communication.