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Below are the words for a dog barking in different
languages. They range from pretty plausible (woef woef)
to what the hell? (wang wang or ham ham)
English woof, woof; ruff, ruff; arf, arf
Albanian ham, ham
Basque au, au; txau, txau (small dogs); zaunk,
zaunk
Bengali
gheu, gheu
Burmese woke, woke
Catalan bau, bau; bub, bub
Chinese, Cantonese wow, wow
Chinese, Mandarin wang, wang
Indonesian guk, guk
Irish amh, amh
Japanese wan-wan
Macedonian av, av
Russian gav, gav tyav, tyav
Ukrainian (dzyau, dzyau)
So the idea is to have the United Nations actually do
something useful for a change, take a vote on what a dog
bark is. I've suggested "raurf", it's the closest diphthong
available to mimic a dog pushing a blast of air into his
mouth that opens then closes. That's a bark, at least to
my ears.
If there are better words that's fine, but the community
of
man could come together, talk about something a little
less depressing than who's killing who that month and at
least get some agreement on something.
If they vote to sanction the country that came up with
"tyav
tyav" I'm okay with that.
Addendum: The F is optional. "RAUR!" works too.
Cat's meow in different languages.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meow Not at all as varied as the dog's bark. They're all basically "meow". [doctorremulac3, May 12 2022]
Wikipedia: Cross-linguistic onomatopoeias
https://en.wikipedi...istic_onomatopoeias Oof. [jutta, May 12 2022]
International Consensus On The Words For 'push' / 'pull' on doors
TOOTthedoor Hi I share your intention to step closer to world peace. International Consensus On The Words For 'push' / 'pull' on doors would be really useful when you are abroad: [jratkai, May 17 2022]
Couldn't find it so check this out instead.
https://www.youtube...watch?v=RXJKdh1KZ0w [doctorremulac3, May 19 2022]
First electronic voice synthesizer
https://www.youtube...watch?v=TsdOej_nC1M [doctorremulac3, May 19 2022]
Kid replicated it.
https://www.youtube...watch?v=gv9m0Z7mhXY This kid's my hero. [doctorremulac3, May 19 2022]
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The question is; do different cultures hear sounds differently enough that they mimic vocally what they actually hear when a dog barks... ... and does crossing bloodlines lead to a differing audio perspective? |
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I had that exact same thought and it was kind of
scary, like "Am I being racist?" |
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Back in my music biz days I bought a lot of music
producing and processing gear. Asian stuff sounded
very different in the high frequency range to me.
European and American stuff sounded very
pleasant while Asian gear often sounded harsh and
"tinny". I wondered about different perceptions
because the countries that were making this stuff
were outstanding in their understanding and
application of technology, I didn't feel it was bad
engineering, but audio gear gets "tuned" (for lack
of a better word) by human ears during the design
process, it's not all oscilloscopes and frequency
charts. Then I heard that one Asian country called
a dog bark "chi chi". Maybe a Pekinese, but a
regular sized dog? |
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Then I compared some Asian instruments to
western and kind of got the same idea. |
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I'd like to ask some Japanese sound engineers what
they're view is. Could this be a thing? Not
perception of the frequency, I'm sure those are the
same for everybody, but processing of it after it's
heard. Could this be different among different
people? |
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Wonder what other percussive sounds are written
out by different cultures. Like an explosion,
"BOOM!" for us for instance. |
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Interesting, just looked up cat's meow in different
languages. Unlike the dog, most interpretations are
very "meow" sounding. (linky) |
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Musical taste is heavily influenced by what you hear over and
over, and well, that's culture. Compare the Western heptonic
scale with Asian or Indian pentatonic or other musical scales,
and you have the makings of discord. |
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Well there you go. That's why I come to this website,
learn something new all the time. |
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The concept we're looking at here is: "Cross-linguistic
onomatopoeias". Thank you Jutta! |
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Given that a dog's bark is about status and hierarchy, I wouldn't be surprised at all if a dog has different status in different countries. In German countries, a dog's bark means "I am the king, except for my private Hitler" |
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Actually I do thing RAUR is is more accurate. |
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Try it, loudly say "RAUR!". It's a dog's bark. Say it to a
dog, get their opinion. |
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Different size dogs have different bark sounds from "ouh ouh" to "eep eep". |
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Perhaps there should be a large multi-page chart with measurements of the dog's head and neck capacity, alogn with conversion factors for specific breeds. Maybe a built in DNA testing kit for extra precision. With a cross-reference code table to look up the numbered IPA expression for the international standard pronunciation, and regional spelling norms, appropriate to that particular animal. |
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I con't consider a dog that says "eep eep" to be a dog,
but yea, having various dog languages would be
appropriate. I think "ouh ouh" sounds like a small
dog. |
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Gave me an idea, thanks Poc. |
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Could you not just bark instead? |
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But how would you spell it? "Bark" uses a K and
enunciated by the back of the tongue pressing up
against the palate. Dogs don't do that. |
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There's was an exhibit of various mouth shapes you
could blow air through with a bellows to make talking
sounds. There was also an old talking machine from I
think the 1930s that you could play with a keyboard,
I'll see if I can find the links. |
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