I'm not exactly sure what you're asking, but I'll try my best to help. Um, most languages started in a specific region, and then were combined and modernized over all of the years to become the languages that exist today.
Spoken languages are believed to have originated in Africa around 50,000 to 100,000 years ago. Over time, as populations migrated and diversified, different languages emerged and spread to various regions of the world.
It is not possible to definitively determine which language was first spoken in the world as languages have evolved over thousands of years. It is believed that the first human languages likely developed in Africa tens of thousands of years ago.
Languages likely evolved over time from early human communication using gestures and sounds to convey meaning. As human societies became more complex, communication evolved into more structured forms of spoken language. Over thousands of years, languages diversified and evolved in separate regions due to isolation and cultural influences. Today, there are thousands of languages spoken around the world.
It is difficult to pinpoint the world's earliest spoken language as languages have evolved over thousands of years. However, some of the earliest known languages include Sumerian, Akkadian, and Egyptian hieroglyphics.
The Celtic languages that are still spoken today include Irish, Scottish Gaelic, Welsh, and Breton. Other Celtic languages, such as Cornish and Manx, have experienced revivals in recent years but are not as widely spoken.
The Welsh language has ancient roots, often traced back to the Celtic languages spoken by inhabitants of the region around 2,500 years ago. Welsh has evolved over time and is now spoken by around a fifth of the population of Wales.
because many of the tribes lived in isolation for thousands of years.
Ther are about 7000 languages that are currently spoken around the world. The number of languages that have existed in the past and are no longer spoken can only be guessed at.
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.
There is no definitive answer to this question as all languages have evolved over time and do not have a single source. Linguists believe that all languages have developed independently and are not descended from a single "mother" language.
The two main languages spoken are Spanish and Portuguese and we continue to speak them because over the years they have become our native languages.
Assyrians speak Aramaic. Which was the language spoken by Jesus Christ and still is spoken. Aramaic has been spoken by Assyrians for over 2000 years
Thousands of years ago, in Benin.
Old Norse was likely the primary language spoken in Vinland, the area believed to be a part of North America visited by Norse explorers around the 11th century. It is possible that the Norse settlers also interacted with indigenous peoples in the region and may have learned some of their languages as well.
The territory of Romania was populated from tens of thousands years.
Anthropologists believe that spoken language likely began around 50,000-100,000 years ago, coinciding with the development of anatomically modern humans. This is supported by evidence of complex communication abilities in early human ancestors. The exact timing and evolution of language remains a topic of ongoing research and debate in the field of anthropology.
The English word "gold" is Germanic in origin and is virtually identical to the same word in German and Dutch and other Germanic languages. In these languages, there has never been a time when gold was called anything other than "gold"--its origin is in some Proto-Germanic language spoken tens of thousands of years ago.
The origin of Euskara, also known as Basque, is uncertain and there are different theories. It is considered a language isolate, meaning it has no known linguistic relatives. Euskara has been spoken in the Basque Country, a region straddling Spain and France, for thousands of years, and it predates the arrival of Indo-European languages in the region.