There are about 47 of these, compressed variants of the more normal languages, used, like birds to communicate over long distances especially when visibility is low.
There are about 47 of these, compressed variants of the more normal languages, used, like birds to communicate over long distances especially when visibility is low.
Reblogged this on Chris The Story Reading Ape's Blog and commented:
Thanks Barbara – Imagine what might have happened if our ancestors had decided to stay with whistling instead of making words – how would our WRITTEN language look today? 😀
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I think speech came before whistling which is for long distance communication & is like a form of shorthand. You got it round the wrong way
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CONGRATULATIONS BARB You’re the only person to pick up on my deliberate misinformation introduction 👍😈😃😄
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Does that make me the only person that read it?
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Possibly 😄😈🙊🙈👀
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Fascinating. Whistling is how stage crews used to communicate to put up or take down theatre sets and it was supposed that it had come from sailors who’d been co-opted to work in the theatre.
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That would make sense. Sailors were often called on to rescue people from burning buildings, and also crews were often multinational so a common language in whistles would help.
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I guess whistling is a different pitch to normal speech so they would know when to pay attention.
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Absolutely.
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