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  1. Feb 2, 2023 · According to LDS Church History, it all started in the 12th century, when Bernard de Clairvaux proclaimed that no more extraordinary miracles existed than the positive changes wrought in believers' lives. Essentially, things classed as "supernatural," such as speaking in tongues, no longer took place among believers.

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  2. The Native Tongues were a collective of late 1980s and early 1990s hip-hop artists known for their positive-minded, good-natured Afrocentric lyrics, and for pioneering the use of eclectic sampling and jazz -influenced beats. Its principal members were the Jungle Brothers, De La Soul, A Tribe Called Quest, Monie Love, and Queen Latifah.

  3. Jan 18, 2018 · Because the first artificial language ever passed down to us is just such a language: it was called Lingua Ignota, and was invented in the 12th century by St. Hildegard of Bingen, an abbess and Christian mystic.

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  5. Aug 13, 2023 · When the disciples begin speaking in tongues, Acts 2:6 says that the crowd of Diaspora Jews who were in Jerusalem for the festival of Pentecost “gathered and was bewildered, because each one heard them speaking in the native language of each.”

  6. Aug 27, 2018 · Kató Lomb, a Hungarian autodidact, learned seventeen tongues—the last, Hebrew, in her late eighties—and in middle age became one of the world’s first simultaneous interpreters.

  7. Apr 16, 2018 · Between 1950 and 2010, 230 languages went extinct, according to the UNESCO Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger. Today, a third of the world’s languages have fewer than 1,000 speakers left ...

  8. Jun 29, 2016 · Elites everywhere began to favor vernacular languages, beginning with Martin Luther’s 1534 German translation of the Old and New Testament. In 1751 French savant Jean d’Alembert captured the trepidation over a looming Babel in science in his introduction to l’Encyclopédie.

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