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The English and German languages are both members of the West Germanic language family.
Deaf and mute people communicate using sign language.
1867, Report on the Systems of Deaf-Mute Instruction pursued in Europe, quoted in 1983 in History of the College for the Deaf, 1857-1907→ISBN, page 240:
Hence the natural language of the mute is, in schools of this class, suppressed as soon and as far as possible, and its existence as a language, capable of being made the reliable and precise vehicle for the widest range of thought, is ignored.
2000, Geary Hobson, The Last of the Ofos, →ISBN, page 113:
Mr. Darko, generally acknowledged to be the last surviving member of the Ofo Tribe, was also the last remaining speaker of the tribe's language.
(uncountable) The ability to communicate using words.
the gift of language
1805 December, Julius Griffiths, “A Journey across the Desert”, in The Monthly Mirror, page 362:
It is wholly out of the power of language to convey any idea of the blissful enjoyment of obtaining water, after an almost total want of it, during eight and forty hours, in the scorching regions of an Arabian desert, in the month of July.
1981, William Irwin Thompson, The Time Falling Bodies Take to Light: Mythology, Sexuality and the Origins of Culture, London: Rider/Hutchinson & Co., page 15:
Language is the articulation of the limited to express the unlimited; it is the ultimate mystery which is the image of God, for in breaking up infinity to create finite beings, God has found a way to let the limited being yet be a reflection of His unlimited Being.
Thus, when he drew up instructions in lawyer language, he expressed the important words by an initial, a medial, or a final consonant, and made scratches for all the words between; his clerks, however, understood him very well.
And ‘blubbing’ . . . Blubbing went out with ‘decent’ and ‘ripping’. Mind you, not a bad new language to start up. 1920s schoolboy slang could be due for a revival.
legal language; the language of chemistry
(countable,uncountable,figurative) The expression of thought (the communication of meaning) in a specified way; that which communicates something, as language does.
body language; the language of the eyes
2001, Eugene C. Kennedy, Sara C. Charles, On Becoming a Counselor, →ISBN:
A tale about themselves told by people with help from the universal languages of their eyes, their hands, and even their shirting feet.
2005, Sean Dooley, The Big Twitch, Sydney: Allen and Unwin, page 231:
Birding had become like that for me. It is a language that, once learnt, I have been unable to unlearn.
(countable,uncountable) A body of sounds, signs and/or signals by which animals communicate, and by which plants are sometimes also thought to communicate.
1983, The Listener, volume 110, page 14:
A more likely hypothesis was that the attacked leaves were transmitting some airborne chemical signal to sound the alarm, rather like insects sending out warnings […] But this is the first time that a plant-to-plant language has been detected.
2009, Animals in Translation, page 274:
Prairie dogs use their language to refer to real dangers in the real world, so it definitely has meaning.
1896, William Horatio Clarke, The Organist's Retrospect, page 79:
A flue-pipe is one in which the air passes through the throat, or flue, which is the narrow, longitudinal aperture between the lower lip and the tongue, or language. […] The language is adjusted by slightly elevating or depressing it, […]