In your understanding, how did language spread from one Proto-Indo-European language to the more than 6,000 languages we speak today? (100-150 words)
Answers
Answer:
From the beginning of time, the lineage of growth and development of humans as a race and group has rested mildly on its migratory nature. The developments and the alterations are more often than not traced to this very trait.
The same trait can be traced as the reason for the emergence of more than 6000 languages that we speak today from the one Proto-Indo-European language. Emerging from one place the languages travel with the people of that place to the place they migrated to.
The result of this migration is the intermixing of two languages which over time results in a new language. Following this pattern, people moving from one place to another takes with them their native language which intermixes with the language of the new place and in due time a new language is born from that intermixing.
With the migration and intermixing, the Proto-Indo-European language branched out to form more than 6000 languages that we speak today.
Answer:
Humans as a race and group have relied on their migratory character for growth and development from the dawn of time. The changes and developments are almost always linked back to this one feature. The emergence of over 6000 languages that we speak today from a single Proto-Indo-European language can be traced back to the same trait. The languages that emerge from one place migrate with the people of that place to the place where they migrated. As a result of this migration, two languages are mixed together, eventually forming a new language. People who move from one location to another follow this pattern, bringing their original language with them, which intermixes with the language of the new area, eventually giving birth to a new language. The Proto-Indo-European language branched out to produce more than 6000 languages that we speak today as a result of migration and intermixing.