Spoken language came first, evolving over thousands of years as a means for humans to communicate with one another. Written language developed later as a way to record and preserve information for future generations. The two forms of language are interconnected, each influencing the other's development.
Spoken language likely predates written language as it was the original method of communication among early humans. Written language developed later as a way to record and communicate information in a more lasting form.
Not at all, there are far older languages than English. English as we know it came into being only after the Norman conquest of 1066, at which time the previous Anglo-Saxon language acquired a strong French influence. Many other languages had already existed for thousands of years before English first appeared. Sanskrit is tremendously older, as is Hebrew, and several others.
Dozens of modern languages came from Latin. The five most common are:FrenchItalianPortugueseRomanianSpanish
Languages that originated from Spanish include Catalan, Galician, and Basque in Spain. Additionally, Spanish also influenced Creole languages spoken in various parts of Latin America and the Caribbean.
Answer:The following answers are incorrect. The oldest spoken language we can attempt to reconstruct is a theoretical language called Proto-Human or Proto-World. The answers below have some good suppositions, and a few good facts, but they don't go far enough back in the linguistic family tree.Answer:Sanskrit, like its relatives Latin and Ancient Greek, survives in ancient texts that can be taught and read but does not survive as a spoken language used in the normal course of living by an identifiable population.While the earliest spoken language used by humans was probably a very sophisticated system of grunts, that language does not survive in any form.The earliest written languages were Semitic languages.The oldest attested Semitic written language was Akkadian which was spoken and written in Mesopotamia as early as 3000 BC but does not survive as a spoken language today. Hebrew and Arabic are Semitic languages that are spoken today and may be among those that can lay claim to being among the oldest languages spoken today. However, as with all languages, they evolve with time. Modern Hebrew and modern Arabic, while stabilized by association with religious texts, probably differ notably from the forms spoken prior to the settling of those texts.Chinese may also have a claim to being among the oldest spoken languages.However, since all modern spoken languages are about equally sophisticated in terms of structure and capabilities, one could argue that they are all of about the same age, that all have evolved from other languages no longer spoken to the level that they are found today.....Oldest spoke language has to be in Africa,since modern humans came from the,I would have thought this to be obviousLike its relatives, Latin and Ancient Greek, Sanskrit survives in ancient writing that can be taught and read but does not survive as a spoken language used today by any identifiable population. While the earliest spoken language used by humans was very likely a refined series of grunts, that language does not survuve in any way, shape, or form.The earliest written languages were the Semitic languages. The oldest confirmed Semitic language was Akkadian, which was spoken and written in Mesopotamia as early as 3000 BC, but does not survive as a spoken language today. Hebrew and Arabic , while stabilized by association with religious texts, probably differ with time.
ALL natural languages started out as spoken languages, including Hebrew. Writing came much later.
Spoken language likely predates written language as it was the original method of communication among early humans. Written language developed later as a way to record and communicate information in a more lasting form.
Not at all, there are far older languages than English. English as we know it came into being only after the Norman conquest of 1066, at which time the previous Anglo-Saxon language acquired a strong French influence. Many other languages had already existed for thousands of years before English first appeared. Sanskrit is tremendously older, as is Hebrew, and several others.
Dozens of modern languages came from Latin. The five most common are:FrenchItalianPortugueseRomanianSpanish
Other than language isolates, ALL LANGUAGES on earth come from a language tree.The most widely spoken languages in North America are:EnglishSpanishThe most widely spoken languages in South America areSpanishQuechuaPortuguese
The Romance languages are derived from spoken Latin: * Italian * French * Spanish * Portuguese * Romanian Also: Catalan, Provencal, etc.
Languages that originated from Spanish include Catalan, Galician, and Basque in Spain. Additionally, Spanish also influenced Creole languages spoken in various parts of Latin America and the Caribbean.
Answer:The following answers are incorrect. The oldest spoken language we can attempt to reconstruct is a theoretical language called Proto-Human or Proto-World. The answers below have some good suppositions, and a few good facts, but they don't go far enough back in the linguistic family tree.Answer:Sanskrit, like its relatives Latin and Ancient Greek, survives in ancient texts that can be taught and read but does not survive as a spoken language used in the normal course of living by an identifiable population.While the earliest spoken language used by humans was probably a very sophisticated system of grunts, that language does not survive in any form.The earliest written languages were Semitic languages.The oldest attested Semitic written language was Akkadian which was spoken and written in Mesopotamia as early as 3000 BC but does not survive as a spoken language today. Hebrew and Arabic are Semitic languages that are spoken today and may be among those that can lay claim to being among the oldest languages spoken today. However, as with all languages, they evolve with time. Modern Hebrew and modern Arabic, while stabilized by association with religious texts, probably differ notably from the forms spoken prior to the settling of those texts.Chinese may also have a claim to being among the oldest spoken languages.However, since all modern spoken languages are about equally sophisticated in terms of structure and capabilities, one could argue that they are all of about the same age, that all have evolved from other languages no longer spoken to the level that they are found today.....Oldest spoke language has to be in Africa,since modern humans came from the,I would have thought this to be obviousLike its relatives, Latin and Ancient Greek, Sanskrit survives in ancient writing that can be taught and read but does not survive as a spoken language used today by any identifiable population. While the earliest spoken language used by humans was very likely a refined series of grunts, that language does not survuve in any way, shape, or form.The earliest written languages were the Semitic languages. The oldest confirmed Semitic language was Akkadian, which was spoken and written in Mesopotamia as early as 3000 BC, but does not survive as a spoken language today. Hebrew and Arabic , while stabilized by association with religious texts, probably differ with time.
Yes. Both first and second generation languages are machine-dependent. The first generation of languages were machine code, while the second were assembly languages. Non-machine dependency came about with the advent of the third-generation of languages, all the high-level languages.
rome came into existance around 700b.c. probably somewhere around there?
One word is a "polyglot." This word comes from Greek, meaning "many tongues." It first came into use in the 1600s. But these days, a more common word is "multilingual." This word can refer to an individual, or to an entire community where more than two language are spoken. (A person who speaks two languages is "bilingual.")
The six most widely spoken standardized Romance languages are Spanish, Portuguese, French, Italian, Romanian, and Catalan. Among numerous other Romance languages are Corsican, Lombard, Occitan, Aromanian, Sardinian, Sicilian, Venetian, Galician, and Friulian.