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aprilie 10, 2026
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"Meow. We know this is the sound a cat makes. Five thousand years ago, so did the s. They just pronounced it âmiw,â according to Sir , the deceased expert on Egyptian grammar. This is very close to how Mandarin Chinese speakers currently pronounce the word for âcat:â mÄo ⌠⌠The consonant-vowel pattern meow may not seem important in our languageâitâs just the sound a cat makesâbut in Chinese, this sound patternâspelled âmiaoââoccurs 16 times by itself, and at least 78 times in conjunction with other characters, according to http://www.mandarintools.com/. The Miao of Chinaâone of the meanings of âmiaoââis an ancient people known for their farming and embroidery; the word also means âfamily, progeny, sprout.â The ' does not include a listing for âmiaoâ or âmeow.â The closest word is âmiaow,â and it means, âImitative. Similar representations of the cry of a cat (and corresponding nouns and verbs) are very widespread in numerous languages: compare, e.g., German miau, Spanish miau, Russian mjau, Turkish miyav, Finnish miau, Chinese miÄo, etc.â Even though OED claims the word is widespread, the earliest date given is 1288. Ancient Egyptian isnât mentioned. Under âcatâ however, OED offers, âHistory points to Egypt as the earliest home of the domestic cat, and the name is generally sought in the same quarter.â Not discussed is the fact that the Egyptians used the word âmiw,â even though Gardinerâs book was published in 1927."
"... Once cats have used the meow to gain a person's attention, they generally use additional visual or tactile techniques for explaining what is so urgently needed, such as rubbing their head and flanks around our legs and then against the food cupboard, or sitting looking pointedly at the back door."
"... Why can't people figure out what a cat's trying to say? The answer was revealed in a study conducted in England in 2015. Using an approach similar to 's, the researchers went to people's homes and recorded cats meowing in four different contexts.* Then they played the calls back to listeners to see if they could correctly identify the context of each call. An important difference from Nicastro's study, however, was that people who lived with each cat were included among the listeners. Participants were reasonably proficient when listening to the cat with whom they shared a home, correctly identifying the context sixty percent of the time. By contrast, when hearing an unfamiliar cat, they picked the correct context a paltry twenty-five percent of the time, no better than guessing randomly. These results suggest that each cat has her own specific meows that she uses in different situations, and that people who live with these cats learn to recognize what each meow means. However, these call are cat-specific; there is no universal cat language, with one type of meow proclaiming "I'm hungry" and another indicating "I'm scared." ..."
"... Will you meow?' "Yesâand you meow back, if you get a chance. Last time, you keep' me a-meowing around till old Hays went to throwing rocks at me and says 'Dern that cat!' and so I hove a brick through his windowâbut don't you tell." "I won't. I couldn't meow that night, becuz auntie was watching me, but I'll meow this time. ..."