Yes this is a universal trait.
Yes.
I do believe if you learn more language it easy to you to communicate other people outside our country or to go where ever country you want.and you confident use any language you learn
The first languages may not have been written down, they may have been a spoken-only language, therefore we will never know what the first EVER language was. However, the oldest text ever found was Sumerian. We have evidence of Sumerian documents dating back 5,000 years. By far, this is the oldest text ever discovered. But that doesn't mean Sumerian is the oldest language, there may have been more before it.
Logically, there is no such thing as a language which no-one has heard of. The people who speak the language have heard of it! There must be thousands or millions of languages which are no longer spoken, and have been forgotten about, but since nobody remembers them nobody can tell you what they are.
If you are referring to the United States, no. The U.S. has never had ANY official language, not even English.
Money serves as a universal language because it is a medium of exchange that transcends linguistic and cultural barriers. It allows people to communicate value and facilitate transactions across different regions and societies without the need for a common language. Additionally, money provides a standardized way to quantify the worth of goods and services, enabling trade and commerce on a global scale.
so that deaf people could understand other people or what ever was beening said
no
You know, nobody will ever want to find the answer to this question so why does it matter? It matters a lot to deaf people.
No, Juliette Gordon Low was not known to have ever learned or spoken sign language. Due to the fact that she was not completely deaf and that her hearing loss occurred later in life, Juliette probably did not learn sign language. In fact, there are stories about how she used her hearing loss to get people to do things she asked them to do. If they tried to tell her "no" she would just go on talking as if she had not heard them. Also keep in mind that there was a lot of stigma about sign languages prior to the 1960s.
It is good to know if you ever meet someone who is deaf, and I also find it useful in school when I want to talk to my friend and we aren't allowed to talk.
Yes the paleolithic people where the first people to make the spoken language. We do not have any proof of them ever creating it.
It really depends, but it would be bad to be either. If you are blind, you can' see. You have to have some one read to you and you need to be able to recognize people's voices instead of their faces. It can be hard to learn too. Same with being deaf. And it would be hard to understand people. But a lot of people would rather be blind. Why? Because at least you can hear, smell, and actually learn a little bit more then when you are deaf. But if you ever get blind or deaf, don't ask these questions.
Juliette Gordon Low spoke two languages, English and French. Although she was deaf, Juliette was not known to have ever used sign language.
Laura Bridgman, a deaf-blind woman who was the first American to be educated in language and literacy, was not married. She devoted her life to her education and helping others with disabilities.
Ronald Reagan was deaf , or almost deaf, in one ear due to an accident when he was making a movie. He wore a hearing aid which, according to stories, he wouild turn off on occasion during boring meetings. I think he was the nearest to deaf US president ever,
No. No language was ever an official language of the US, not even English.
the language of where ever their from