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The human body seems to have been designed for producing language. The mouth is relatively small and can be opened and closed rapidly, and the flexible tongue can be used to shape a wide variety of sounds. The teeth are upright, not slanting outwards like those of apes, and they are roughly even in height. Such characteristics are not needed for eating but are extremely helpful in pronouncing sounds such as f, v and th. The lips have much more intricate muscles than those of other primates, and their flexibility helps with sounds like p, b and w. Many scholars have studied how the development of language is related to the evolutionary development of the human species. One evolutionary step may have resulted in the development of a vocal tract capable of producing the wide variety of sounds utilized by human language. The assumption of an upright posture moved the head forward and the larynx, or “voice box,” lower. This created a longer cavity above the vocal chords, which acted as a resonator for any sounds produced by the larynx. Another evolutionary step may have been development of a mechanism for perceiving and distinguishing sounds. However, the ability to hear speech sounds is not a necessary condition for the acquisition and use of language. Humans who are born deaf learn the sign languages that are used around them. Still, all languages, including sign language, require the organizing and combining of sounds or signs in specific constructions. The human brain has specialized functions in each of its two hemispheres. Those functions which are analytic, such as tool-using and language, are largely confined to the left hemisphere of the brain. It may be that there is an evolutionary connection between the tool-using and language-using abilities of humans, and that both are related to the development of the brain.
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