american
No evident history. Might be several hundred years before the birth of Jesus christ
No one knows where wine originated because it was presumably thousands of years before recorded history.
Dice have been used since before recorded history, and it is uncertain where they originated.
Nobody knows. Humans were living in the areas where mangos originated long before anyone invented history.
Qigong originated before recorded history. Scholars estimate qigong to be as old as 5,000-7,000 years.
Integers were first used before the AD period in history. It is believed they were originated from Latin origins and developed after that time.
According to Irishlanguage.net (see Link) under the headings: History of the Irish Language Stages of the Irish language It was developed before the 4th century
Scholars have identified the origins of the Hebrew language as a dialect of Canaanite around 900 BCE. The Greek language of Homer's Epics existed long before 1000 BCE, so Greek is much older than Hebrew.
Yes, there are plenty, many of which were "Anglicized" by the "Colonists" from the "Savage Natives" who were tagged as "Indians" by the clueless explorers. Corn, succotash, and turkey, for example. Winnebago and Winnipeg originated in "The American" language. In reality, there were over 5,000 languages spoken on the "American" continent before the arrival of the Europeans. The related link below is just one of many good ways to become acquainted with the English language.
Probably about the same time that language itself did, i.e. well before the dawn of history.
All people originated in Africa before spreading out around the world.
That it is an ancient language of southwestern Europe and that it may be an ancient language of Eurasia's Caucasus is the history of the Basque language.Specifically, the Basque language is known to have been spoken before, during and after ancient Greek and Roman contacts with the Iberian Peninsula. It still is spoken in the modern equivalents of that ancient homeland: northwestern Spain and southwestern France. But according to some scholars, the Basque language's origins may have been elsewhere. If such is the case, then the history of the Basque language also will take in the rugged mountainscapes of the Eurasian Caucasus, from which herders oasis-hopped southeastward into Asia (and possibly southwestward through Asia and into Europe before the time of the Indo-Europeans).