ChatterBank1 min ago
Do you speak Felinese?
18 Answers
I was looking up something for a friend (about cats) and found this little list -
Listen to your cat. If you watch what your cat is doing when it meows, you may learn to distinguish which meows are associated with which requests (or protests) and eventually know the difference between a "let me out" demand and a "give me food" demand by sound alone.[3] Each cat is different and may have its own variations, but some common meows can include:
Short meow: standard greeting.
Multiple meows: excited greetings.
Mid-pitch meow: plea for something.
Drawn-out mrrroooow: a demand for something.
Low pitch MRRRooooowww" a complaint or displeasure.
High-pitch RRRROWW!: anger, pain or being fearful.
Chatter (rapid teeth-chattering): excitement, frustration.
Chirrup (a cross between a meow and a purr with rising inflection): friendly greeting sound, often used by a mother cat to call to her kittens.
Purr: Invites close contact or attention.
Hiss: A serious sign of aggression.
Listen to your cat. If you watch what your cat is doing when it meows, you may learn to distinguish which meows are associated with which requests (or protests) and eventually know the difference between a "let me out" demand and a "give me food" demand by sound alone.[3] Each cat is different and may have its own variations, but some common meows can include:
Short meow: standard greeting.
Multiple meows: excited greetings.
Mid-pitch meow: plea for something.
Drawn-out mrrroooow: a demand for something.
Low pitch MRRRooooowww" a complaint or displeasure.
High-pitch RRRROWW!: anger, pain or being fearful.
Chatter (rapid teeth-chattering): excitement, frustration.
Chirrup (a cross between a meow and a purr with rising inflection): friendly greeting sound, often used by a mother cat to call to her kittens.
Purr: Invites close contact or attention.
Hiss: A serious sign of aggression.
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Perry does the 'multiple meows' when a) he's sitting on the lounge windowsill and sees a bird froliking in the garden, or b) when he's sitting on the lounge windowsill and sees me pulling into the drive.. so like to think this means he's pleased to see us.. also the 'drawn out meow' when we've been out for tea and have bought home left over chicken/ham.. he now associates white napkins with food, so when he sees a tissue he's all over us like a rash!
Talking cat-ish.. why do they do the claw thing before they settle down, especially when it's on my silk dressing gown on the bed..?
Talking cat-ish.. why do they do the claw thing before they settle down, especially when it's on my silk dressing gown on the bed..?
Zajaczek's Coco does the tail end flick a lot...but she has a lot of cattitude...
A neighbour has a young cat who does tail up...mega meows greeting to almost everyone he sees Some one will pick him up and walk off with him he's that soft...
Paint... why is it they go places they normally avoid when they have painty paws.... like on the couch...up the curtains, dark rugs....
A neighbour has a young cat who does tail up...mega meows greeting to almost everyone he sees Some one will pick him up and walk off with him he's that soft...
Paint... why is it they go places they normally avoid when they have painty paws.... like on the couch...up the curtains, dark rugs....
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