Spyke

How did they get it so wrong? "Mjan" doesn't even exist in Swedish, it should be mjau.

3

Interesting how the cat sound is almost the same in most languages, but the dog sound varies a lot

3

This doesn’t make much sense because it purely looks at spelling, and not at pronunciation. We use ‘woef’ in Dutch as well, which is pronounced like, and probably has a common origin with, German ‘wuff’ and English ‘woof’.

French ‘ouaf’ is also pronounced essentially the same as Dutch ‘waf’, likely also not by accident.

This map is pretty much meaningless.

4
jdrreply

Spanish "guau" sounds like English "wow"

(Depending on accent, obv)

2

General pattern seems to be:

  • labial and/or velar continuant (approximant or fricative) or [h]
  • open and/or rounded vowel
  • labial and/or velar continuant or a close back rounded vowel

Exceptions are relatively easy to explain:

  • What's being transliterated as Farsi "gh" is likely "غ". It's [ɢ]~[ɣ]. It is not an actual exception.
  • Russian used to have a [ɣ] sound, but it got merged into /g/. (Note this explains why some older loanwords with /h/ get neared to /g/, [h] and [ɣ] sound somewhat similar.)
  • Spanish gu- is [gʷ], a sound Romance languages often use as replacement for [w], after Latin [w] became [v]. Spanish did redevelop the sound but odds are the onomatopoeia is older.
5
feddit.nu

How is voff so much different than woof? It's pronounced like exactly the same.

5

Yeah, same for German "wuff". The pronunciation is slightly softer in "woof", but there's no letters you could use to make it sound more similar.

5
mander.xyz

French is "ouah ouah".

German can be "wuff wuff" or "wau wau".

I doubt the rest is correct

3

Is must have been really hard to make that chart. Imagine listening to lots of dogs from different places

3

And just like that I remembered about the Arbitrary Nature of Linguistic Sign I read about 20 years ago.

1
Kertynareply
feddit.nl

Probably also depends on where in the Netherlands you are. Rarely hear anyone say "Blaf!" I thought "Woef!" would be the most common.

2

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How different countries and languages represent barking dog sound in words | Spyke