A language is like a special club where everyone knows the same secret code to talk and play together.
Imagine you're playing with your friends in the park. If all of you speak English, it's easy for you to understand each other, just like how you know what "ball" means when someone throws it to you. But if one friend speaks a different language, like Spanish, and doesn’t know English, it might be harder to play together unless someone helps translate.
Now think of all the languages in the world as different clubs. Each club has its own special rules, how words are made, where they go when you're talking, even how people say "hello" or "thank you." A language is just a group of people who follow these same rules together.
What gives a language its power?
Just like a playground needs kids to play on it, a language needs people to use it. If no one speaks it anymore, it's like the playground has been abandoned, it still exists, but not many people know how to play there anymore.
So, what makes a language... a language? It’s when enough people agree on the same rules and keep using them, just like your club needs enough friends to stay fun and exciting.
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