Hieroglyphics and Hieratic.
They all had a system of writing
The scribes in ancient Egypt did all the writing.
scribes did all of the reading and writing in ancient egypt
Not exactly. Not all Egyptian writing was hieroglyphic, and not all hieroglyphic writing was Egyptian. Hieroglyphics is a general term for picture-based writing systems, and the ancient Egyptians were not the only people to invent such a system. Ancient Mayan and Luwian (a language of Asia Minor) were also written using hieroglyphs (which looked very different from the Egyptian kind). At the same time, the ancient Egyptians had other writing systems. Hieratic, a form of cursive writing using ink on papyrus, existed alongside hieroglyphics from the very beginning. Another cursive form of writing, demotic, later developed from hieratic. Ultimately all of these writing systems were replaced by the Coptic alphabet, which was derived from the Greek alphabet.
The most famous of all ancient Egyptian scripts is hieroglyphic. The Mayans also used the Mayan hieroglyphic.
There are many different types of names on studies on ancient writing, depending on which ancient language or culture you are studing.Such as: The study of ancient writing on papyrus is called Papyrology.Epigraphy, which means writing on something, refers to writing on an eduring substance like stone, etc.But, in all, the study of all ancient writing is called Palaeography.
It was passed along from father to son.
Sorry, but no one really knows for certain. Ancient tribes had wars all the time, but since they had no writing system, we don't know for sure. XP Sorry...
They all spoke in different languages but the system of writing was universal so everyone could read and write it.
There a part of some ancient writing.
they didnt have a very good fair system that is all ik
Not only did all of the Romance languages evolve from Latin, but in the 19th century, some English grammarians decided that Latin was the perfect language and decided to rewrite the rules of English to make it more like Latin. So, such rules as not putting prepositions at the ends of sentences and not splitting infinitives (though that one does get disregarded in more poetic English. Star Trek wouldn't be the same without it) come straight out of Latin. Generally, with Romance languages and English, that which is considered to be better grammar is more closely related to Latin.