Traditional vertical writing, where text is arranged from top to bottom, is commonly found in languages such as Chinese, Japanese, and Korean. In these languages, characters are typically read from top to bottom and right to left in vertical columns. This style is often seen in calligraphy and formal documents. However, modern usage often incorporates horizontal writing as well.
its a language that you cannot speak but is only written down
Go to your main Home page Go to Settings and click on Account Settings You will see a Language Tab... click on thatIt will bring up the Language drop down menuScroll down towards the bottom of the Drop down menuYou should see English (Pirate) as an optionIt is between Eesti and Esperanto.Good Luck Matey
acts was written in euchastalian
German
How they came up with the language was by combining the michif-cree and the metis language to make the new language.
The first language to be written down in Europe was old Mycenaean. It was a Semite Language. Albright figured it out.
its a language that you cannot speak but is only written down
Rub your arm softly. from up to down. and then down to up.
The epic poem Beowulf was first written down in Old English. It is one of the oldest surviving works of literature in the English language.
M. Stambolieva has written: 'Building up aspect' -- subject(s): Aspect, Bulgarian language, English language, French language
they were written all ways up down side side cross
Sanskrit originated as an oral language and later developed a written form. The earliest compositions in Sanskrit date back to around 1500 BCE and were passed down orally through generations before being written down. The written form of Sanskrit helped standardize the language and preserve its texts.
Aesop is believed to have written in ancient Greek. His fables were passed down orally before being written down by later authors.
Karen Nichols has written: 'Buckle Down on Mississippi Reading/Language Level 3'
Elissa D. Asp has written: 'When language breaks down' -- subject(s): Patients, Language, Discourse analysis, Autism spectrum disorders, Language disorders, Alzheimer's disease
up and down
It is body language for "yes".