Animal Language In Animal Communication

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“As long as people have wondered about the world, they have been intrigued by the mysteries of human nature. The most commonplace activities of our lives- the things we take for granted- can become quite puzzling when we try to understand them systematically.”
Communication is one of the most applied methods of expressing a thought, information; it is one of the everyday activities that intertwine human life.
The concept has the meaning of sharing feelings, ideas and opinions with others. The word itself derives from the Latin “communis” meaning “common”, either to exchange or to share some sort of information. The term has also another etymological concept, “communicare” that refers to participate, to attend, but nonetheless they illustrate …show more content…

Animal language is divided into two systems: discrete and non-discrete, but the message likewise the symbols they try to convey are limited in quantity and in dimension. Their communication system is instinctive; their qualities cannot be removed, these being inherited from their type of specie. In the case of humans, it is non-instinctive, because of their ability to acquire and learn language, this being the result of social interaction. For instance, if a baby grows up in the same time as a puppy, the child will be able to imitate the barking of the dog, whereas the dog won’t progress this ability.
The famous Swiss linguist, Ferdinand de Saussure demonstrated that linguistic signs or words are arbitrary, because there is no connection between the sound of a word and its meaning. Onomatopoeic words are also regulated, even if they are words that are expected to sound like what they represent. In English the sound uttered by the pig is “oink”, whereas in German the pig sounds “grunz”. In other languages, the sound of the pig has been reduplicated, for instance “the Danish pig” sounds øf-øf, “the Dutch pig” makes knor knor and in French groin

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