Communication, Linguistics
Dozens of traditional cultures use a whistled form of their native language for long-distance communication.


"A man in Laruns, southwestern France, whistling as a form of speech. Like others in the Canary Islands and elsewhere, local people have learned to whistle their language to communicate across long distances. Linguists are studying whistled speech to help understand which sound elements are essential to comprehension." (Iroz Gaizka / AFP Via Getty Images)

"Tourists visiting La Gomera and El Hierro in the Canary Islands can often hear locals communicating over long distances by whistling — not a tune, but the Spanish language. 'Good whistlers can understand all the messages,' says David Díaz Reyes, an independent ethnomusicologist and whistled-language researcher and teacher who lives in the islands. 'We can say, ‘And now I am making an interview with a Canadian guy.’

"The locals are communicating in Silbo, one of the last vestiges of a much more widespread use of whistled languages. In at least 80 cultures worldwide, people have developed whistled versions of the local language when the circumstances call for it. To linguists, such adaptations are more than just a curiosity: By studying whistled languages, they hope to learn more about how our brains extract meaning from the complex sound patterns of speech. Whistling may even provide a glimpse of one of the most dramatic leaps forward in human evolution: the origin of language itself."

Article: More Than 80 Cultures Still Speak in Whistles