"I speak Spanish to God, Italian to women, French to men, and German to my horse." - Holy Roman Emperor Charles V
It is thought that the requirement to teach the highly precise skills of tool manufacture in early Neolithic times around 120,000 years ago caused a similarly precise, sequential set of sounds to be used, giving rise to language. However, anthropologists note that Neanderthals had a pharynx too short to produce sounds of human speech, but by around 40,000 years ago humans had evolved a suitable vocal tract. (source)
The ancient Egyptians used heiroglyphics only for ritual purposes and official inscriptions. For more mundane use, from around 1500 B.C., a script known as was used, and starting around 700 B.C., a second script known as demotic was used. Both of these scripts were written using a brush on papyrus. [ Ancient Egypt | Languages of the World ] (source)
Around half of the world's population speaks a language that is originally derived from Indo-European, a language spoken as early as 4,000 B.C. Scholars assume that Indo-European originated in a temperate climate, because languages descending from it have common words for cold, snow, and winter, but not for tropical plants and animals like rice, palm, and tiger. (source)
The oldest known written language is Sumerian, which originated in Mesopotamia around 3,500 B.C. It was written in cuneiform script, and the symbols represent the sounds made by syllables. (source)
All the world's major alphabets developed from a single alphabet invented 3,600 years ago in the Middle East, known as the North Semetic Alphabet.
Starting around 900 B.C., Aramaic became the language of trade and diplomacy everywhere between Greece and the Indus valley. Although the Aramaeans were destroyed by the Assyrians, their language, which had 22 consonants and was written on papyrus, was more practical than the Assyrian cuneiform script. At the start of the fifth century B.C., Aramaic became the official language of the Persian Empire. (source)
Mithridates VI (132-63 B.C.), King of Pontus (an area in Asia Minor along the Black Sea), mastered 25 languages in his lifetime. (source)
An instrumental factor in keeping Persian the language of modern Iran (instead of being replaced by Arabic) was the Shah-nama or Book of Shahs, which was written in Persian. Finished in 1010 by Abul Qasim Mansuar, who wrote under the pen name Firdausi, it was a poem of 60,000 verses (seven times the length of Homer's Iliad), detailing the history of the Persian kings from legendary beginnings down to Khosru II in the seventh century. It has remained the great national poem of the nation and its preeminent literary work. [ Languages of the World | Books and Literature ] (source)
Around 5,000 languages are currently spoken in the world (an exact count is hard to give because even linguists don't always agree as to whether two languages are different or if one is a dialect of the other). About 4% of them are spoken by 96% of Earth's population. [ World Countries | Languages of the World ] (source)
There are around 175 languages in the world that are spoken by less than ten people, and almost 500 that are spoken by less than 100. One-fourth of the world's languages are spoken by less than 1,000 people.
The language most closely related to English is Flemish. (source)
The Icelandic language is remarkably similar to Old Norse. Icelandic schoolchildren have no difficulties reading the Eddas and the sagas, the great epics written in Old Norse. [ Vikings | Languages of the World ] (source)
The language of the Khoi-Khoin tribe in South Africa consists of clicks, clacks, and kissing sounds, and is spoken by breathing in instead of out. When the Boers met these tribesmen, their language sounded so much like stammering and clucking to them that they called them Hottentots, from the Dutch hateran en tateren, "to stammer and stutter". (source)
Beware of bottles labelled "Gift" in Germany. In German, Gift means poison. (source)
Guyana is the only South American country with English as its official language. [ Languages of the World | World Countries ]
In nearly every language around the world, the word for "mother" begins with an m sound. There are some exceptions in the Uralic language group, however.
The Russian word for "use" is "upotreblenie". (source)
The names of Minnesota and Winnipeg have the same meaning. Minnesota means "murky water" in Sioux, and Winnipeg means "murky water" in Cree. [ Languages of the World | Place Names ]
English spelling is so bizarre that, as George Bernard Shaw once pointed out, "ghoti" could conceivably be pronounced "fish", if the "gh" sound in "enough", the "o" sound in "women", and the "ti" sound in "action" were used. (source)
English is the only language that capitalises the first person singular, "I". (source)
In order to read intelligently books in their native language, Chinese pupils must be familiar with 1,000 different signs. (source)
In Thai, one shows politeness by using the word "slave" for "I". [ Languages of the World | Slavery ] (source)
In Arabic, there are different words for "you" depending on the gender of the person addressed, and verbs are classified as either masculine or feminine. (source)
Sequoyah, a Cherokee Indian, invented an alphabet for the Cherokee language, the only person known to have single-handedly invented an alphabet for a living language. It took him 12 years to invent an 86-character alphabet, more accurately described as a syllabary, since each symbol represented a syllable. It could be learned in a few days, and only a few months after its introduction, thousands of Cherokee had become literate. (source)
The basic unit of sound into which languages are broken down into is called a phoneme. There are between 11 and 67 phonemes in human speech. English uses between 35 and 46 phonemes. Hawaiian only uses 13. (source)
In some Eskimo languages, a noun can have over 1,000 forms. (source)
The European Union has 21 official languages. (source)