Its name is believed to derive from the early Canaanite language "house of tranquility".
In earlier Swahili language this would have been called 'kuchaaga' meaning to say bye.
In Dutch, the process was already underway around the twelfth century, making it one of the earliest languages to be affected.
This early language was used widely into the 1970s and is still a standard internationally.
However, it contains very old materials in early Vedic language.
The earliest English language uses of "conscious" and "consciousness" date back, however, to the 1500s.
Due to extensive borrowing from Tahitian there now often exist two forms for what was the same word in the early language.
This is similar to early object-oriented languages such as Smalltalk.
The earliest language was strictly vocal; reading and writing came later.
One of these missing themes is the selective advantage of early language.