• @[email protected]
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      46 months ago

      Oh they certainly do look weird at you when you talk in a different language, no doubts! But the meme asks if the dog would notice a different language of “barks” rather than human speech.

    • @[email protected]
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      46 months ago

      Fun fact: all dogs speak English, because Americans do not give a fuck about social customs.

      German dogs are incredibly well-behaved. They’re stringently trained and trusted to stay put when told, to the extent that owners routinely take them shopping, and leave them just inside the front door, where they will wait patiently and mind their own business.

      Unless they hear someone speaking English. Then they get all wiggly and worry about getting caught, because they know Americans will give them scritches and tell them they’re cute.

    • dave@hal9000
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      16 months ago

      So that’s funny, but you know what I seriously find to be very strange? How different the onomatopoeias for a dog’s bark (well, any common animals sound) are in different languages. Here are the ones I know from experience, done kinda phonetically in English: American English: woof woof Brazilian Portuguese: ow ow (au au) Farsi: hop hop

        • dave@hal9000
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          16 months ago

          Right! I was just doing it out of memory, but there’s many other weird ones. I was looking this up many years ago after an Iranian friend told me it’s hop hop there. I remember that for dog, rooster, and I think maybe also pigs and cows, there was wide variation across the world. But for cats, meow was really consistent across most languages. I might be wrong, it’s been a while.

  • Turun
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    6 months ago

    Yes, because they communicate with natural behavior (I’m blanking on the word here. It’s behavior they were simply born with)

    Language is learned, but you can still “understand” another human if they are angry, crying, or laughing, no matter where they are from.

    • @[email protected]
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      26 months ago

      A lot of dog social skills and communication is learnt, rather than preprogrammed. I wouldn’t dismiss the possibility of regional dialects immediately. There would be a lot of commonality, but plenty of room for mismatches remain.

    • DacoTaco
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      86 months ago

      I assume this is because their communication is based on posture, look and pheromones?
      I was wondering if ducks would understand each other, with them having confirmed to have accents based on region