Languages ​​remain the greatest expression of human creativity after the primitive ancestors communicated between them by signs, despite the many differences between the letters of the letters and methods of pronunciation and date of appearance since the emergence of man on the face of the simple.

Languages ​​have evolved over successive generations in such a way that it is difficult to determine the point between one language and another, making it difficult to resolve the question of the oldest known language and the assertion of the origin of one language on the ruins of another.

The following is a list of ten ancient languages ​​still in use today:

Arabic
Classical Arabic dates back to around 1600 years, while its origins go back much earlier. Turkey, Chad, Mali, Senegal, Eritrea, Ethiopia, South Sudan and Iran.

He wrote in Arabic a large number of the most important religious and intellectual works of the Middle Ages, and its status rose after the spread of Islam among countries, and became the language of politics, science and literature for centuries in the lands ruled by Muslims.

Arabic is one of the most abundant languages ​​in terms of linguistic material, and contains the lexicon of the Arab tongue of the perspective of the 13th century AD more than eighty thousand articles.

Arabic is one of the most abundant languages ​​spoken by 467 million people around the world (Getty Images)

Greek
The language dates back to 1500 BC and is now used by 13 million people living in Greece and Cyprus, an official language recognized by the European Union, and the world's leading philosophers, scientists and thinkers were thinking, speaking and writing.

The first Greek-written guide is more than 3,000 years old and has been certified since then and is the official language of Greece and Cyprus.

It does not resemble the Greek language, which was adopted in Greece in the ninth century BC, but evolved to a stage known as the "medieval Greek" adopted during the fourth century AD during the reign of Alexander the Great to become the current modern Greek.

The Greek language is over 3,000 years old and is the official language of Greece and Cyprus (Getty Images)

Persian
The language used in Iran, Afghanistan, Tajikistan and other regions, dating back to 800 AD and distinguishes it from other modern languages ​​is that it has changed little since its emergence.

Hebrew
The Hebrew language dates back more than 3,000 years, and in the third century BC Western Aramaic began to be replaced by Hebrew in the fourth century AD, although it continued to be adopted as a literary language.

More than nine million people now speak Hebrew around the world and have spread again over the past two hundred years thanks to Jewish-Zionist movements.

The Hebrew language dates back more than 3,000 years (Getty Images)

Latin
Dating back to the Roman Empire, which was formed in 75 BC, the official language of Poland and the Vatican is still one of the oldest classical languages ​​that have stood the test of time and inspired many newer languages.

Basque
It is used by some Basques in France and Spain and is perhaps the strangest language puzzle in the world because it is not associated with any language in the world.

Scientists have assumed several theories about their origins but none have been proven, but it is well established that they existed in this region before the arrival of the Romans, who developed Latin, into French and Spanish.

Chinese
Spoken by about 1.2 billion people as their first language, dating back to 1250 BC, it is considered one of the longest and most modern languages ​​alongside Tamil.

Tamil Language
This language appeared before Sanskrit and is still widely supported, especially in the southern Indian peninsula (Tamil Nadu). Tamil is the official language of many Asian countries such as India, Singapore and Sri Lanka.

Tamil is the official language of many Asian countries such as India, Singapore and Sri Lanka (Getty Images)

Finnish
It belongs to the Finnish Uyghur language family, which includes several ancient languages ​​used by a Siberian minority, and includes many borrowed words from other languages ​​and has maintained more unchanged than its original languages ​​did.

Icelandic
This language belongs to the Indo-European language family, specifically the branch of Germanic languages. English is also a Germanic language, but it belongs to the western branch, while Icelandic belongs to the northern branch of Germanic languages.

Many Germanic languages ​​marginalized themselves and lost some of the characteristics of other Indo-European languages, while Icelandic developed carefully and preserved those characteristics. Even the Danish rule of the country, from the 14th to the 20th century, did not change the language, so it remained as the Norwegian settlers brought it.