No. No one knows what many early human languages were like. The Grimm brothers worked out the way languages change. It is possible to take their research and examine the sounds between closely related languages and determine their relationship and how long ago they split apart. It is not possible to reestablish their original language. It would take a large number of languages to reestablish an original language.
by records
Animals use a form of communication that is not language. Therefore, it cannot be translated. Animal communication has no words or grammar. It cannot be used to talk about things such as the past or the future. It can only communicate needs and emotions.
The origins of language are unknown. All natural human languages are extremely complex, too.
There is evidence of drug use in the early neolithic (11,000 to 850 BCE) See Links
six thousands more languages in the world
"Human" in English is umano in Italian.
Well, languages spoken by human beings. Which includes all of the languages we know about actually. Although computer codes are also referred to as "languages", they are not really the same thing, as they are not used by sentient beings to converse.
Human = "ningen" + Puzzle = "nazo"
The Japanese word for "Human" is "Ningen" (pronounced kneen-gehn)
humano
Ancient, in dealing with human history, is anything from the 5,000 years since human history was first recorded. This includes the Early Middle Ages and also the Postclassical era.
Dr. Carlos do Amaral Freire..... He knows 115 different languages....