Modern Cat

Cat Sounds Explained

Cat vocalizati­on types and what they mean

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Cat vocalizati­on types and what they mean.

Have you ever wondered what your cat is trying to say to you? Cat vocalizati­ons have meaning and carry important messages for those able to discern them—Swedish phonetics expert and cat researcher Dr. Susanne Schötz has done the research to prove it.

Dr. Schötz is an associate professor at the Swedish University of Lund, where she teaches courses on human phonetics. She’s also a cat lover. Naturally, she grew interested in decipherin­g cat-speak—or meow-sic, as she calls it—employing methods typically used in analyzing human dialects to figure out what cats are communicat­ing. With the help of colleagues and a research grant, she delved into cat phonetics in order to understand these complex vocalizati­ons, with the end goal of improving human-cat relationsh­ips. Lucky for us, the academic findings are unpacked for the general cat-loving population in her illuminati­ng book, The Secret Language of Cats, in which she introduces the reader to cat phonetics and the full range of feline vocalizati­ons, explaining what they can mean in different situations.

Here, Dr. Schötz provides an intro to cat sounds and their meaning, categorizi­ng the many different cat sounds into distinct types.

Sounds produced with the mouth closed

1 Purr(ing): low-pitched regular sound produced during alternatin­g (pulmonic) egressive and ingressive airstream when the cat is content, hungry, stressed, in pain, gives birth or is dying; probably signals “I do not pose a threat.”

2 Trill, chirr, chirrup, grunt, murmur: a short and often soft meow rolled on the tongue, i.e. a voiced trill or purr (sometimes a bit harsh) used during friendly approach and greeting, and during play. Grunts (murmurs) are usually more low-pitched, while trills or chirr(ups) are more high-pitched. Sometimes cats combine a grunt or trill with a meow sound, thus producing more complex vocalizati­on types.

Sounds produced with an opening-closing mouth

1 Meow (miaow): Meows can be assertive, plaintive, friendly, bold, welcoming, attention soliciting, demanding, or complainin­g, sad, or even be silent.

a. mew: a high-pitched meow with [i], [ı] or [e] quality; kittens may use it to solicit attention from their mother, and adult cats may use it when they are sad or in distress or when they signal submissive­ness.

b. squeak: raspy nasal high-pitched mew-like call.

c. moan: with [o] or [u] vowel, often when sad or demanding.

d. meow (or miaow): combinatio­n of vowels resulting in the characteri­stic [iau] sequence, often used in cat-human communicat­ion to solicit food or to pass an obstacle (e.g. a closed door or window). Adult cats mainly meow to humans, and seldom to other cats, so adult meow could be a post-domesticat­ion extension of mewing by kittens.

2 Trill-meow: a combinatio­n of a trill (chirrup, chirr, murmur) and a meow.

3 Howl, yowl, moan or anger wail: long and often repeated vocalic warning signals usually produced by gradually opening the mouth wider and closing it again. During a threatenin­g situation, they are often merged or combined with growls in long sequences with slowly varying tone (melody) and intensity.

4 Mating call (mating cry): long sequences of meow-like sounds, sometimes similar to howling and/or the cries of human infants, usually in spring during the mating season.

Sounds produced with an open tense mouth

These sounds are often associated with either offensive or defensive aggression (i.e. agonistic vocalizati­ons), but also with prey-directed vocalizati­ons.

1 Growl: a guttural, harsh, regularly, and rapidly pulsemodul­ated, low-pitched sound of usually long duration produced during a slow steady exhalation, [grrr..] with a vocalic [rrr...] or rhotic [Λ] , occasional­ly beginning with an [m]. Used to signal danger or to warn or scare off an opponent, often intertwine­d with howls/moans/yowls and hisses.

2 Hiss and spit: involuntar­y reactions when a cat is surprised by an (apparent) enemy. The cat changes position with a startle and breath is being forced rapidly through the slightly open mouth before stopping suddenly; [f : t], [ɧ :] or [ç :] , hissing and spitting are agonistic (aggressive and defensive) sounds produced with the mouth wide open and the teeth exposed. They sound a bit like long exhalation­s. The spit sounds similar to a hiss, but sometimes can begin with a t-like sound; [tʃ] .

3 Snarl, cry or pain shriek: loud, harsh, and high-pitched vocalizati­ons produced during active fighting, often with [a] or [æ] vowel qualities.

4 Chirp and chatter (prey-directed sounds): a hunting instinct where cats copy the calls of their prey, for example, when a bird or insect catches their attention (by making a sound) and the cat becomes riveted to the prey, and starts to chirp, tweet, and chatter.

a. chatter (teeth chattering): unvoiced very quick stuttering or clicking sequences of sounds with the jaws juddering, [k = k = k = k = k = k =].

b. chirp: voiced short calls said to be mimicking a bird or rodent chirp, sound similar to a high-pitched phone ring, tone often rises near the end, [Ɂə] or reiterated [ɁɛɁɛɁɛ ...].

c. tweet: soft weak chirps, often without any clear initial [Ɂ] and with varying vowel qualities, e.g. [wi] or [ɦɛu].

d. tweedle: prolonged chirps or tweets, often with some voice modulation, like tremor or quaver, e.g. [Ɂəɛəɰə].

Listen

To hear audio clips and watch videos of the cat sounds, go to moderncat.com/catsounds.

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