What Is The Difference Between Animal Language And Human Language

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Human languages and animal communication systems have been studied immensely, and it is intriguing to study how similar animal communication systems, such as those of elephants, are to human languages. Elephants have several methods of communicating, including acoustic, visual, tactile, seismic, and chemical communication (Acoustic Communication). The acoustic method of communication in elephants is most similar to most human language systems, and will therefore be the focus of this paper. First, human language must be defined and parameters must be set for what human language really is. Timothy Jay explains that human language must be communicative, arbitrary, structured, multilayered, productive, and evolutionary (Jay 2). In addition, two more features of human language should be considered when discussing communication systems, which are discreteness and displacement (Hutchins, Class Notes).

The first, and probably most basic, feature of human language is that it is communicative. …show more content…

However, human language is structured, and language has to have rule-governed patterns of sounds, letters, and meaningful words (Jay 3). Obviously, are no letters or words in elephant communication, but do the sounds follow a structured pattern? Human language is special in that placing words in random orders will not make a meaningful sentence. An elephant will make a specific rumble twelve times within half an hour in order to express that it wants to go a certain direction, while facing in that direction (Acoustic Communication). Although this is an indication of communication, this is not an indication of structure. The elephant could present various different calls in different orders, yet still be expressing the same idea – that there is a predator nearby, or that there is an intended direction of

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