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No, animals do not communicate with each other using different languages like humans do. They use a variety of signals, sounds, and body language to convey messages and information.
Noam Chomsky, a prominent linguist, proposed the theory of Universal Grammar, which suggests that all human languages share a common underlying structure and that humans have innate linguistic abilities. This theory posits that there are universal principles that govern the way languages are constructed in the human brain.
During the Paleolithic period, spoken languages had not yet emerged. Instead, early humans communicated through a combination of gestures, body language, and primitive vocalizations. Language, as we understand it today, began to develop much later in human history.
A number of linguists think the click languages of the bushmen of Southern Africa date back to the first languages people used. Hunters could use the click languages without scaring the African animals they were hunting while spoken languages would scare them.
No, Tamil is not the first language on earth. It is one of the oldest classical languages and has a rich literary tradition, but it is not the first language spoken by humans. The exact origin of languages is unclear and is a topic of ongoing linguistic research and debate.
There are a few websites that employ humans to translate text. Some of them are Linguanaut, Ackuna and FreeLang. They provide lists of native translators who will translate documents or passages for free.
yes
The talk in all types of languages like are language is "english"
Yes, computers have languages that they communicate with us and each other in. There are thousands of different computer languages written for different purposes with different complexities. The simplest language computers communicate in is binary, ones and zeros, which can be compared to humans using Morse Code to communicate. It is very simple, but it is hard for humans to understand. The next step up is called assembly language which could be compared to speaking only in slang, still hard for all except a few humans to understand. The computer has to use a program to translate the assembly language into binary to understand what to do. There are lots of intermediate languages that still use some slang, but allow the programmer to combine several actions in one command. As computer languages have become more complex so humans can understand and program them easier, the computer has to do more work to translate, but is much faster at it than we are. There are programing languages now that allow a human to say what they want the computer to do and the program writes the code that the computer needs to use to do what was requested. This makes it very easy for us to communicate to computers to get them to do what we want. Computers still use binary and lower level languages to communicate with each other as they understand it and have to do less work to accomplish what is desired.
Yes, computers have languages that they communicate with us and each other in. There are thousands of different computer languages written for different purposes with different complexities. The simplest language computers communicate in is binary, ones and zeros, which can be compared to humans using morse code to communicate. It is very simple, but it is hard for humans to understand. The next step up is called assembly language which could be compared to speaking only in slang, still hard for all except a few humans to understand. The computer has to use a program to translate the assembly language into binary to understand what to do. There are lots of intermediate languages that still use some slang, but allow the programmer to combine several actions in one command. As computer languages have become more complex so humans can understand and program them easier, the computer has to do more work to translate, but is much faster at it than we are. There are programing languages now that allow a human to say what they want the computer to do and the program writes the code that the computer needs to use to do what was requested. This makes it very easy for us to communicate to computers to get them to do what we want. Computers still use binary and lower level languages to communicate with each other as they understand it and have to do less work to accomplish what is desired.
As humans, they would speak the various human languages that are now spoken in the world.
European Early Modern humans, once known as Cro-Magnon people, lived prior to 45,000 years ago, which was long before writing was invented. So we have no way of knowing what languages they spoke.Assumptions we can make are that they spoke different languages, and it's possible that at least some of those languages may be ancestors to Indo-European languages of today.
input devices
Different languages. Hair color. Race...............
The languages of ancient cave-dwelling humans are unknown.
output hardware
Low-level languages are one of two major types of programming languages. They are more similar to machine language, which is the language that computers understand directly; as opposed to high-level languages which are similar to English as humans speak.