They were everywhere. Just as saying "Where are schools." They are everywhere.
No, a Mesopotamian terraced scribe is not a Ziggurat. The answer would be A Mesopotamian terraced Pyramid is a ziggurat.
A Scribe
zagguratt damnet
They were a professional class. Becoming a scribe required a long and serious training. Their names have not survived; a scribe was just an official or 'pen for hire' who on request wrote down the messages and names of others.
Most schools have volunteer students or teachers to help blind people write their exams.
Scribe is a noun (a scribe) and a verb (to scribe).
scribe = el escriba
In ancient Egypt, the path to becoming a scribe typically involved formal education in a temple or palace, where students learned hieroglyphics and administrative practices, often reserved for the elite class. In contrast, Mesopotamian scribes were trained in cuneiform writing at schools known as edubbas, where they learned not only writing but also mathematics and literature; this education was accessible to a broader range of social classes. While both regions valued scribes for their literacy and administrative skills, the educational structures and social access to scribal training differed significantly.
I do not know what scribe means.
Scribe is the answer.
The Scribe was created in 1966.
The apprentice scribe was unable to keep up with the flow of words. Pass me that scribe, youngster. Scribe the starting point.