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Post by Joyusoto57 on Oct 25, 2023 4:59:17 GMT
South Africa and Argentina have disappeared by the 1990s. Experts believe that of these languages and those associated with them. And another threat to tradition. Anastasia, a linguist at Queen's University in Kingston, Canada Lear points out: Many languages have become fragile and endangered. The main factors affecting this are globalization and immigration. Furthermore, it seems particularly brutal that the regions of the world where most of the languages are spoken are becoming increasingly inhospitable to human habitation due to disasters related to the climate crisis. The final nail in the coffin of indigenous languages Vanuatu is an island nation in the moible number data South Pacific. In contrast, it occupies an area of 1.5 km, which is about the size of the Moscow region. At the same time, Vanuatu speaks 2 languages (one language per kilometer) which is the highest density of languages on the planet. Meanwhile, Vanuatu is one of the countries likely to be affected by flooding associated with rising sea levels. Added Many small language communities are located on islands and coasts hit by hurricanes. Others live on land where rising temperatures threaten traditional farming and fishing practices, prompting people to migrate. Thus, climate change further disrupts communities. The final nail in what I call Indigenous coffee is millions of people being forced from their homes due to natural disasters related to global warming.
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