897tgigvib
Garden Master
- Joined
- Mar 21, 2012
- Messages
- 5,439
- Reaction score
- 929
- Points
- 337
Everyone with any experience in the world at all knows that Cats are filled with more soul and spirit than humans. We don't have cats, cats have us. They are definitely smarter than humans.
There is a communication gap between humans and cats! See, since cats are so much smarter, they expect us to learn their language.
Problem with that is, cat language is HIGHLY COMPLEX! See, each cat has his or her own dialect of CATINESE. Add to that, Catinese is, similar to humans, divided into linguistic families. For instance, the Maine Coon language is similar to the British Shorthair language. Those two are dialects of the same language, but with large differences here and there. Abyssinian cats speak a language that is very pure, however, American Shorthair language is highly influenced by it. And Siamese! Siamese language is perhaps the most involved and convoluted of all. It is perhaps the most pure cat language. A Siamese mother cat who has kittens with a father who is not pure Siamese will not teach her native language to her children. Instead, they will do as many not purebred, mongrel, or feral, or otherwise typical randomly birthed kittens do: They will devise their own language. If the littermates are together for some length of time, they will develop a litter language of their own...similar to how occasionally high school human girls are known to do. (In my high school, way back during the upper paleolithic, there was a group of girls, one of the super popular cliques, who developed and spoke a "vithaganvithigee" language.) However, languages such as these are usually very ephemeral, going extinct in a matter of months, 3 years at most. Boontling is a most rare exception.
The rareness of humans developing their own language is a sign of how weak our human minds are. BABY KITTENS DO IT WITH EASE AND FELICITY!
Cats expect us to learn their language. No amount of reward or punishment can convince them otherwise!
There is a communication gap between humans and cats! See, since cats are so much smarter, they expect us to learn their language.
Problem with that is, cat language is HIGHLY COMPLEX! See, each cat has his or her own dialect of CATINESE. Add to that, Catinese is, similar to humans, divided into linguistic families. For instance, the Maine Coon language is similar to the British Shorthair language. Those two are dialects of the same language, but with large differences here and there. Abyssinian cats speak a language that is very pure, however, American Shorthair language is highly influenced by it. And Siamese! Siamese language is perhaps the most involved and convoluted of all. It is perhaps the most pure cat language. A Siamese mother cat who has kittens with a father who is not pure Siamese will not teach her native language to her children. Instead, they will do as many not purebred, mongrel, or feral, or otherwise typical randomly birthed kittens do: They will devise their own language. If the littermates are together for some length of time, they will develop a litter language of their own...similar to how occasionally high school human girls are known to do. (In my high school, way back during the upper paleolithic, there was a group of girls, one of the super popular cliques, who developed and spoke a "vithaganvithigee" language.) However, languages such as these are usually very ephemeral, going extinct in a matter of months, 3 years at most. Boontling is a most rare exception.
The rareness of humans developing their own language is a sign of how weak our human minds are. BABY KITTENS DO IT WITH EASE AND FELICITY!
Cats expect us to learn their language. No amount of reward or punishment can convince them otherwise!