Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Meow
Vocalization by cats From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Remove ads
A meow or miaow is a cat vocalization. Meows may have diverse tones in terms of their sound, and what is heard can vary from being chattered to calls, murmurs, and whispers. Adult cats rarely meow to each other. Thus, an adult cat meowing to human beings is generally considered a post-domestication extension of meowing by kittens: a call for attention.[1][2] Felines usually communicate with each other via their shared sense of smell, yet with people they often make verbal cues around behavior, such as having a specific sound indicate a desire to go outside.[3][2][4]

A mew is a high-pitched meow often produced by kittens.[5][6] It is apparently used to solicit attention from the kitten's mother,[7] and adult cats may use it as well.[5] The mew is similar to what is described in Brown et al. 1978 as an isolation call. By around three to four weeks of age kittens do not mew when at least one littermate is present, and at four to five months of age kittens stop mewing altogether.[8][9]
Remove ads
Background and biological details
A cat's meow can be assertive, plaintive, friendly, bold, welcoming, attention-soliciting, demanding, or complaining. It can even be silent, where the cat opens its mouth but does not vocalize.[10] Just as humans may verbalize exhaustively when they are happy, so can cats. According to The Purrington Post, a chatty cat is likely happy too.[11]
Meowing fundamentally evolves as a learned behavior. Formerly feral cats meow much less often than felines accustomed to human interaction their entire lives. Particularly attached cats will meow in an imitative and reflective fashion in response to human communication that involves a back-and-forth process between the two beings, which can involve mutual emotional connection.[3]
Remove ads
Etymology
In American English, the spelling meow was first used in 1842. Before that, the word could be spelled miaow, miau, or meaw. Of any variant, the earliest attestation of a cat's cry in Early Modern English is from the 1630s.[12]
See also
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads