The world’s languages, are they related and how? Scientists divide them into families and
groups, but haven’t found the common denominator yet.
What was the first language of humanity, that basic mother tongue? The answer to this question
seems to be the...
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The world’s languages, are they related and how? Scientists divide them into families and
groups, but haven’t found the common denominator yet.
What was the first language of humanity, that basic mother tongue? The answer to this question
seems to be the most important for solving the great number of linguistic mysteries.
Progressive scientists of the world develop the theory of monogenesis. According to this the
humanity is one and the same species, but human races are subunits within the species
subdivision that sprang as the result of human’s settling in different geographical zones of the
world. The theory of monogenesis proves that peoples rise from a common parental source and
their languages rise from the only ancestral language.
The Finnish linguist and ethnographer of the XIX century Mathias Alexander Castren has
explored languages and ethnography of Finno-Ugric, Tunguso-Manjurian and Paleo-Asiatic
peoples and has composed grammars and dictionaries for twenty langua
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