Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. Dec 11, 2022 · The indication is that human language was a fairly late acquisition of Homo sapiens. It is argued in this study that language, as we know it today, probably began to emerge about 20,000 years...

    • George Poulos
  3. Jul 24, 2017 · No one knows for sure when language evolved, but fossil and genetic data suggest that humanity can probably trace its ancestry back to populations of anatomically modern Homo sapiens (people who would have looked like you and me) who lived around 150,000 to 200,000 years ago in eastern or perhaps southern Africa [4,5,6]. Because all human ...

    • Mark Pagel
    • m.pagel@reading.ac.uk
    • 2017
  4. Feb 3, 2016 · To those of us who study human evolution, this incredible universality suggests that our species has had language right from when Homo sapiens arose in Africa between 200,000 and...

    • Mark Pagel
  5. Language developed from the calls of human ancestors. Language was derived from gesture. The first perspective that language evolved from the calls of human ancestors seems logical because both humans and animals make sounds or cries.

  6. Slowly at first, possibly beginning with simple sounds made by our ancestors Homo heidelbergenis, and then increasingly rapidly until there were thousands of languages spoken around the planet. But this has been fiercely debated and much is still not understood.

  7. Sep 1, 2017 · Much like the evolution of biological species, which stretches from a unicellular prototype to humans, the evolution of language is a continuum that extends from the first conventionalized grunt to the most proficient linguistic system.

  8. Aug 8, 2022 · Scientists believe humans as we know them today likely evolved around 300,000 years ago. Some of our evolutionary ancestors like Homo erectus and cousins like the Neanderthals may have had...

  1. People also search for