Like the U.S., the Hittites kept of the tradition of agriculture. Both civilizations grew crops like barley and wheat for trade or for themselves. However, the U.S. trades these crops for money while the Hittites traded their goods for other, more exotic goods. The Hittites would only trade their goods for seals if they were trading within their neighborhood. These seals usually have a religious motif, although some geometric types have been found. Different castes had different types of seal, to limit trading options.
As for law, the Hittites had overthrown the Babylonians and had inherited the Code of Hammurabi. However, they formulated a set of laws which were much more humane that that of Hammurabi. Like the U.S., capital and corporeal punishments were strictly limited to just a few situations, and specific payments were substituted instead. A crime of theft or damage was punished with compensation and additional fine. Other offenses were recompensed by a fine of money, usually silver. However, unlike the U.S., the Hittites didn't lock people up for any amount of time.
The Hittites learned cuneiform from the Babylonians and passed the art of writing on clay tablets to Crete. Like the U.S., the Hittites wrote from left to right - but then unlike the U.S., the Hittites would reverse the next line to right to left, and so on. The Hittites' spoken language, Hurrian, is one of the strangest languages in the Near East. While of the Indo-European language family (which includes English, German, Greek, Latin, and