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Orangutan Communication is Eerily Similar to Ours
AI Summary
This science video examines how orangutan communication closely mirrors human language patterns, challenging assumptions about what makes us unique. Learners will encounter vocabulary related to linguistics and animal behavior, including terms like 'communication,' 'hypothesis,' 'consonant-like calls,' and 'turn-taking.' It's a fascinating way to practice B1 listening while exploring the origins of human language.
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DownloadFor centuries, people have asked what makes us different from animals.
There have been a bunch of different hypotheses for which human trait is the key ….
tool use, self-awareness, culture, or our awareness of death, to name a few.
But one of the most accepted hypotheses is that it’s our language that makes us unique.
Lots of species communicate. But as I’ll explain, that’s different.
And for a long time, scientists have wondered where our special, complex language skills came from.
Recent research on one of our relatives may shed some light on that question.
Because there’s evidence that orangutans may use language as well, and it’s teaching us something about our own.
[♪ INTRO]
Now one thing that you will have picked up on is that orangutans….
Aren’t our closest relatives. And it’s true that we’re more closely related to chimps, bonobos, and gorillas than to orangutans.
But regardless of how far away they are on our family tree, they’re chatty enough that researchers took notice.
First, a little backstory on our giant orange cousins. Orangutans are the largest tree-dwelling mammals in the world, and the only living great apes native to Asia.
The two most common species are the Bornean and Sumatran orangutans, which are found, unsurprisingly, on the islands of Borneo and Sumatra.
It’s sort of ironic to be talking about orangutans in the context of language, because they aren’t particularly social animals.
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Key Vocabulary (14)
Used to refer to the person or people that the speaker is addressing. It is the second-person pronoun used for both singular and plural subjects and objects.
A system of communication consisting of sounds, words, and grammar used by people of a particular country or area. It is the primary tool humans use to express thoughts, feelings, and information to one another.
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