Explanation : The desire to communicate was the main drive
behind language making, which itself was
incident upon social life and cultural growth.
During the stone ages, the communication
was in a nascent stage. Communication with
the aid of runners, birds, arrows, smokes and
shouting was replaced with signs and non-
verbal communication via cave paintings,
petro glyphs, ideograms and pictograms
which gradually made way for different kinds
of verbal methods of communication.
The technological innovations of the nineteenth
century and later - post and telegraph,
telephone, phonograph, photography,
newsprint, motion pictures, fibre optic, radio,
television, computer, internet, social media,
and so on, have powerfully changed the way
humans communicate with each other.