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  1. Historical Latin came from the prehistoric language of the Latium region, specifically around the River Tiber, where Roman civilization first developed. How and when Latin came to be spoken has long been debated.

  2. Sep 1, 2017 · The evolution of linguistic features clearly suggests that language as a whole has been driven by a gradual evolutionary process, but in the literature it is often implied that language appeared and promptly became full-blown when a sine qua non condition was met.

    • Bernard H. Bichakjian
    • 2017
  3. Jan 2, 2023 · Latin evolved from the dialects of the Italic peoples of ancient Italy, and its earliest written records date back to the 7th century BCE. This ancient language was spoken by the people who resided in central Italy during the Iron Age (1200-700 BCE).

  4. Mar 1, 2013 · This remark is reminiscent of objections made by some scholars such as Maine (1875) and Freeman (1881, 1886) to Sir William Jones's 1786 hypothesis that Sanskrit, Greek, Latin, and other Indo-European languages had all evolved ultimately from the same protolanguage, Proto-Indo-European.

  5. The Golden Age of Latin literature spanned the 1st century BCE and 1st century CE, followed by the two century "Silver Age." The language continued in widespread administrative use through the post-classical period, although Greek superseded Latin in the Eastern Roman Empire. In some cases, languages are completely unattested and only inferred ...

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  7. This article focuses on the evolution of language over the years. The evidence for primate and human evolution has derived primarily from comparative anatomy and fossil records, although since the 1960s, molecular and biochemical evidences have increasingly been used to delineate phylogenetic relationships among living species and diverse human ...

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