Egypt
Mt. Everest is older than the country of Egypt however the land mass that Egypt is on is just as old as Mt. Everest or older.
According to linguistic scholars Tamil is older than Kannada.Classical Kannada (language of the Kadamba/Chalukya/Rashtrakuta literature, 4th AD)Language familyDravidianSouthern Tamil-Kannada Kannada-Badaga KannadaTamil Language tree -Classical Tamil (Sangam literature ca. 3rd BC or Older, by Tolkappiyam)Language familyDravidianSouthern Tamil-Kannada Tamil-Kodagu Tamil-Malayalam Tamil Tamil
Yes, Tamil is considered to be older than Latin. Tamil is one of the oldest classical languages in the world, with origins dating back over 5,000 years, while Latin is estimated to have originated around the 8th century BCE.
Tamil is older than Telugu, according to linguistic scholars :*Classical Tamil (Sangam literature ca. 3rd BC or Older, defined by Tolkappiyam)Classical Telugu (Dravidian language, Kakatiya literature, 9th AD)SOURCES :* Encyclopedia Britannica (2008), "Telugu literature", Quote: "The literature, beginning in the 10th or 11th century.* Zvelebil, Kamil (1997), The Smile of Murugan: On Tamil Literature of South India: On Tamil Literature of South India
no... Egypt was first
Egypt
Younger brother-Thambi Older Brother-Anna
There is dispute between Sanskrit and Tamil on which one is oldest. Scholars on both sides provide facts and accounts that their language is the oldest. Hence there is no concrete answer to this question.please answer with source and be neutral while answering.http://wiki.answers.com/Which_is_older_than_Tamil_language#ixzz1rba74S1y
Nope.India is about 2000 yrs, if not more, older.
Sanskrit is considered to be older than Tamil. Sanskrit is an ancient Indo-European language that has been used for thousands of years, while Tamil is a Dravidian language that originated around the same time but is generally considered to be younger than Sanskrit.
Research suggests that Proto-Dravidian, the forerunner of Tamil, was spoken around the third millennium BCE. Hebrew is estimated by some to be least 1000 years older than that. Some scholars believe Hebrew evolved from a Canaanite dialect late in the tenth century BCE, long after Proto-Dravidian. Others date it back to more than 12,000 years, long before the Hebrew tribe became monotheistic. Jewish tradition states that Hebrew was the language with which God created the world (Rashi commentary, Genesis 2:23, quoting the midrash). Thus, certain Hebrew Psalms (92 and 139) and teachings are attributed to Adam, the first man.