Hard to know. Most languages are spoken and are never written. When languages like that disappear, they leave no trace.
Another reason it is hard to know is that languages change all the time and it is tricky trying to figure out when they have changed into a new language. Usually we know when a written language becomes so different from its spoken counterpart that the language represented by the written language has died. Latin was still used as a written language long after people only spoke the languages it had morphed into--the Romance languages of French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese and so on. A similar process happened when Old English morphed into Middle English: people were still writing Old English after it was really a dead language.
As of 2009, there are approximately 434 extinct languages; 49 languages from Africa, 68 languages from Asia, 8 languages from Central America and The Caribbean, 64 languages from Europe, 99 languages from North America, 30 languages from Oceania, and 116 from South America.
There is no way to know, because most of the languages in the history of humanity are dead, without any record of their existence. Language has probably been in existence for close to a million years.
There are no truly "dead" languages being used in daily communication, as by definition they are no longer spoken. However, languages like Latin and Ancient Greek are studied and used in specific contexts such as academia, religious ceremonies, and cultural events. These languages are considered "classical" rather than dead as they still serve a purpose in certain settings.
A person who speaks many languages is called a polyglot. Multilingual ie a multilingual person speaks many languages
2 languages : italian and english
Yes there are many, but most are dead
As of 2009, there are approximately 434 extinct languages; 49 languages from Africa, 68 languages from Asia, 8 languages from Central America and The Caribbean, 64 languages from Europe, 99 languages from North America, 30 languages from Oceania, and 116 from South America.
There is no way to know, because most of the languages in the history of humanity are dead, without any record of their existence. Language has probably been in existence for close to a million years.
There are no truly "dead" languages being used in daily communication, as by definition they are no longer spoken. However, languages like Latin and Ancient Greek are studied and used in specific contexts such as academia, religious ceremonies, and cultural events. These languages are considered "classical" rather than dead as they still serve a purpose in certain settings.
Except for dead languages.
So that ordinary people, with no knowledge of 'foreign' or 'dead' languages can read it easily.
In order to understand how they affected the world. Also, it broadens your knowledge on different cultures. There are certain words or phrases from older or "dead" languages witch are still in use in our society today and also to learn the origin of our modern languages.
Classical languages are those that have a rich and ancient literary tradition that is not an offshoot of another tradition. For that reason most "classical" languages are dead languages.
There are Thousands of known dead languages. Here is a partial list, in no particular order:Ancient MacedonianBulgarDalmatianDacianIllyrianLemnianLiburnianPaeonianOld Church SlavonicEteocretanEteocypriotPannonian RomancePechenegPelasgianÅ?okacThracianYevanicAequianCamunicElymianEtruscanFaliscanJudæo-PiedmonteseLatinLeponticLigurianLombardicMessapianOscanPaleo-SardinianRaetianSicanianSicelSicilian ArabicUmbrianVeneticVestinianVolscianJudaeo-AragoneseJudaeo-CatalanJudaeo-Portuguese
The Aboriginals had many languages.
21 languages
The Dead Sea Scrolls Were discovered in eleven caves near the Dead Sea, between 1947 and 1956. The main language of the Scrolls was Hebrew, but there are many written in Aramaic and a few written in Greek.