User:Ashweewuv14/sandbox

Article Evaluation

Content: all seems accurate and explains the history of feminist rhetoric

Tone: nothing bias, explains race, ethnicity, and challenges but they are not bias since they are factual

Sources: one fact that was presented had a side note saying "[citation needed]" because it was talking about today's feminist rhetoric. it may seem to be bias since it is talking about today and marginalized groups and there is no citation

Talk Page: multiple people explain what corrections/additions/deletions they revised to the feminist rhetoric article. a couple of the editors names had the word "bot" in their name which may be concerning as to if they are a real person or not. also a good note was that a few people made it more neutral and cleaned up spelling, citations, and grammar.

Human communication, or anthroposemiotics, is the field dedicated to understanding how humans communicate. Human communication is grounded in cooperative and shared intentions.

Richmond and McCroskey (2009) state that "the importance of communication in human society has been recognized for thousands of years, far longer than we can demonstrate through recorded history". Humans have communication abilities that other animals do not. Being able to communicate aspects like time and place as though they were solid objects are a few examples. It is said that humans communicate to request help, to inform others, and to share attitudes as a way of bonding.

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"communication is  a joint  activity which  largely  depends  on  the  ability  to keep common  attention,  to  share  the  relevant  background  knowledge and joint experience in order to get the content across and make sense in the exchanges" Clark, H.H. (1996).Using language. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

"Chimpanzees are the closest living species to humans. Chimpanzees are closer to humans, in genetic and evolutionary terms, than they are to gorillas or other apes. The fact that a chimpanzee will not acquire speech, even when raised in a human home with all the environmental input of a normal human child, is one of the central puzzles we face when contemplating the biology of our species. In repeated experiments, starting in the 1910s, chimpanzees raised in close contact with humans have universally failed to speak, or even to try to speak, despite their rapid progress in many other intellectual and motor domains. Each normal human is born with a capacity to rapidly and unerringly acquire their mother tongue, with little explicit teaching or coaching. In contrast, no nonhuman primate has spontaneously produced even a word of the local language." Fitch, T.W. (2010).The Evolution of Language. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.