I believe rabbis CAN be scribes.
The scribe carefully transcribed the ancient text onto a fresh scroll.
Yes, they were also with farmers, magicians and priests.
Historically, for instance in ancient Israel, scribes were a class of well-educated Jews who studied and explained the law, there were referred to as lawyers or rabbis occasionally, they were not priests. In modern society, a scribe usually works in the medical field, and sees that notes are taken of all medical procedures, correctly entered in the chart, etc.
Scribe is a noun (a scribe) and a verb (to scribe).
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.
If you were a scribe in Egypt you were in a higher class than most. You could read and write. If the Egyptian needed you to interpret something or as a diplomat, they would probably come to see you.
The word "describe" comes from the Latin word "describere," which means "to write down" or "to copy from" in English. It is derived from the prefix "de-" (down) and "scribere" (write).
scribe = el escriba
I do not know what scribe means.
The Scribe was created in 1966.
Scribe is the answer.
It's mostly Orthodox rabbis who are multi-generational rabbis.