Dog supremacy 💪

  • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    You really don’t understand any dog words? They aren’t that hard to learn. You may take a few days with a new dog to recognize their voice and place the common vocalizations accurately, but they have vocal patterns.

    Every dog has a warning bark, an “attention” bark, and a play bark for sure. I’ve never met a dog that didn’t, though some are way too chill to use their warning bark often.

    They’ve got a lot of other vocalizations that are and aren’t barks as well.

    When you combine those with their body language, which is also pretty universal with individual variations akin to human vocal tics and gestures, you get a fairly complex body of “words”.

    It isn’t so complex you can’t pick up the language in a few weeks of practice, but it is a form of language that all dogs use.

    Like, a play bark is almost always accompanied by either a play bow, or a play jump. Sometimes both.

    The position of ears and tails modifies vocalizations, or stand as their own expression without vocalizations when the entire body is taken into account. You can tell what a dog is feeling and “thinking” just by watching them for a second or two. That isn’t words, per se, but it is language.

    The real difficulty comes in discerning the tiny changes that indicate mood that are based on the same action, but different positioning and/or emphasis via body movement. Watching a tail wag can tell you a lot. The position up and down, the direction of the wag, and the vigor of the wag combine to tell you things.

    Dogs tend to do them and read them instinctively, which we can’t do, so you’re still dead on with them being smarter than us lol

    Seriously, go watch some dogs in groups. Ignore everything except their barks, and you’ll eventually pick up the differences.

    • D-ISS-O-CIA-TED@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      You’re actually right! I can tell when my dog is barking to go outside, at someone on the street, if one of her toys got stuck and she wants me to get it for her, barking to play, etc. All from outside the room. Never thought about it before

      • disinterested_a_hole@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        My dog has different barks for foxes, mooses, and bears.

        And actually he’s got multiple fox barks - one when he’s barking for them to come into the yard below the balcony, and then the one to tell them to get out of his yard!

  • Devi@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I know my dogs barks, there’s one for going out to the loo, one for food, one for telling me there’s something in the garden, etc. It varies between dogs but I think you learn how your dog speaks somewhat quickly.

  • davidgro@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    We do know some - growling, whining, yelping, etc. Basically the ones for a single strong emotion.

    • HubertManne@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      what are you talking about. humans are so cool once you really get into studying them. er um. I mean us. us humans.