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To browse Academia. The perspective of time At this point, we may ask how old multilingualism and linguistic diversity really are. It is not just the world of today which is multilingual; the past has had its fair share too. Many languages have vanished, and from Anglosaxon and Etruscan via Ostrogothic, Punic and Sumerian to Tocharian, Vandal and Wiradhuri we can draw up a long list of extinct languages some of which we may still know today, if they have been preserved in writing and deciphered; while others we may still know of, if at some point somebody has cared to leave a mention or a name.
When we travel back in time, what we find is that, at each and every stage of the written record for the past 5, years, there have always been many languages in the world. Ever since those ancient times, monolingualism may have been a most powerful dream, ideal or norm, 18 but the fact is that there has always been linguistic diversity in the world. Going back in time from today's multilingual New York 19 and London 20 to the time of Uruk, we can track its existence at all intermediate stages of known history-in eighteenth-century Europe, 21 the Renaissance.
Here, as Steven Fischer has observed, 32 there is "an absolute boundary of linguistic reconstruction" in "the teeming linguascape of 10, years ago. Human language is as ancient as humanity itself, mirroring our shared history, diverse cultures, and the constantly changing nature of communication.
At the National Academy of Behavioral Science www. To truly grasp this connection, it's important to journey through the formation of languages, their evolution, the vibrant variety of languages that exist today, and the poignant loss of those that have disappeared. The Birth And Evolution Of Languages Language likely began as a simple tool for our ancestors to express basic needs, emotions, and ideas. Imagine early humans relying on gestures, sounds, and basic symbols to get their messages across.
Over time, these rudimentary forms of communication blossomed into complex systems, eventually evolving into the spoken and written languages we know today. Multilingualism and multiculturalism are burning topics in today's societies.