Every child, even those that can’t string together a full sentence know at least one thing. Cows go moo. Sheep go ba-a-a. Kitties go meeeeow.
At least they do if the animals in question speak English. Sure, a Japanese frog may _sound_ like it’s saying, “ribbit ribbit!”, but it’s actually saying, “kerokero”. Sounds of the World’s Animals is a pretty enjoyable collection of other examples.
In some cases, animals sound very much alike around the globe. Cats the world over say meow, miaou, myau, meo-meo, and meu.
But other times they differ wildly. Dogs can’t seem to make up their minds, and say woof, ham ham, gav, gonggong, wanwan, haf-haf, and voff, depending on where they live.
Particularly interesting is that in almost every language except English, a rooster makes some form of “kukuriku” noise. Where the hell did we English speakers get the “doodle” from?
Speakers of English—put your doodles away!
Katherine says:
Well for the rooster, if you do the whole “cock-a-doodle-doo!” thing then it kind of sounds like the rest.
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Jared says:
I used to have a bird that said “Shutup"… that could have just been a Texas dialect though.
mcs says:
My cow goes “sizzle sizzle sizzle”