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What is Language: Many animal and even plant species communicate with each other. Humans are not unique in this capability. However, human language is unique in being a symbolic communication system that is learned instead of biologically inherited. Symbols are sounds or things which have meaning given to them by the users. Originally, the meaning is arbitrarily assigned. For instance, the English word "dog" does not in any way physically resemble the animal it stands for. All symbols have a material form but the meaning can not be discovered by mere sensory examination of their forms. They are abstractions A word is one or more sounds that in combination have a specific meaning assigned by a language. The symbolic meaning of words can be so powerful that people are willing to risk their lives for them or take the lives of others. For instance, words such as "queer" and "nigger" have symbolic meaning that is highly charged emotionally in America today for many people. They are much more than just a sequence of sounds to us.A major advantage of human language being a learned symbolic communication system is that it is infinitely flexible. Meanings can be changed and new symbols created. This is evidenced by the fact that new words are invented daily and the meaning of old ones change. For example, the English word "nice" now generally means pleasing, agreeable polite, and kind. In the15th century it meant foolish, wanton, lascivious, and even wicked. .More Information Click Here

 

 A To Z Listing Foreign Languages

A

B

C

D

E

F

G

H

I

J

K

L

M

N

O

P

Q

R

S

T

U

V

W

X

Y

Z

1. Ga (Volta-Congo)

2. Gadaba (Dravidian)

3. Gafat (Semitic) (extinct)

4. Gagauz (Turkic)

5. Galician (Romance)

6. Gangte (Tibeto-Burman)

7. Garhwali (Indo-Aryan)

8. Gaulish (Celtic) (extinct)

9. Gayo (Malayo-Polynesian)

10. Gazi (Iranian)

11. Ge'ez (Semitic) (extinct)

12. Gen or Gẽ or Mina (Volta-Congo)

13. Georgian (South Caucasian)

14. German (Germanic)

15. German Sign Language (Signing)

16. Ghomara (Berber) (extinct)

17. Gikuyu or Kikuyu (Bantu)

18. Gilbertese or Kiribati (Malayo-Polynesian)

19. Gileki (Iranian)

20. Goaria (Indo-Aryan)

21. Gondi (Dravidian)

22. Gothic (Germanic) (extinct)

23. Gawar-Bati or Gowari or Narsati (Indo-Aryan)

24. Grangali or Gelangali (Indo-Aryan)

25. Greek (Indo-European)

26. Guanche (Berber) (extinct)

27. Guaraní (Tupian)

28. Gujarati (Indo-Aryan)

29. Gula Iro or Kulaal (Volta-Congo)

30. Gullah or Sea Island Creole English (English-based creole)

31. Gusii (Bantu)

32. Gwichʼin (Athabaskan)

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About Germany Germany wears its riches well: elegant big-city charm, small picture-postcard towns, pagan-inspired harvest festivals, a wealth of art and culture and the perennial pleasures of huge tracts of forest, delightful castles and fine wine and beer are all there for the savoring.Deep in the heart of Europe, Germany has had a seminal impact on Continental history. From Charlemagne and the Holy Roman Empire to Otto von Bismarck's German Reich, Nazism and the rise and fall of the Berlin Wall, no other nation has molded Europe the way Germany has - for better or worse.