It is impossible to know because writing developed thousands of years after spoken language. We only have a record of the last 3,000 or 4,000 years but humans (homo sapiens) have been around for 100,000 years. It is likely that pre-human hominids such as homo erectus had language.
MandarinEnglishSpanishHindi-Urdu
The four most widely spoken languages in the world are English, Spanish, Mandarin Chinese, and Hindi.
The four most spoken languages in the world are English, Mandarin Chinese, Hindi, and Spanish.
There are more than 6,500 languages not spoken in the Philippines. Four of them are:AfrikaansHungarianYiddishBasqueIf you're talking about the 5 languages of the Philippines that went extinct, they are:Agta DicamayAgta VillaviciosaAyta TayabasKatabagaErmitaño creole
Pakistan has four neighbouring countries Afghanistan where Pashto and Dari is spoken India where Hindi, Gujrati and other native languages are spoken China where Mandarin Chinese is spoken and Iran, where Farsi is spoken.
Aramaic is a language. It is the only language spoken in Aramaic, just as English is the only language spoken in English.
Do you mean the four most popular languages in the world? That would be Mandarin Chinese, Spanish, English, and Arabic, in order.
The four Romance languages are Spanish, French, Italian, and Portuguese. These languages evolved from Latin and are spoken in various parts of the world.
I am assumeing that you mean ancient written languages, because Indo European is too far back to place but the first written language was Sumerian then Egyptian Heiroglyphics followed by Linear A (Greek we think as it still has not been deciphered) and then Phonecian.
Romansch, the least-widely spoken of Switzerland's four official languages.
The most widely spoken languages in Zaire are:FrenchLingalaKongoSwahiliTshilubaZaire has been cited as having as many as 250 languages spoken within its borders. In fact, the exact number is difficult to specify; it depends on whether or not a particular tongue is defined as a distinct language or merely as a dialect of a neighboring one.
It's still spoken in Romandie, at West of Belgium, and it's one of the four official languages, with German, Italian and Rumantch.