Question What do Roosters say in your language?

Thunder Chicken

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Recently I joined a group of friends and acquaintances in a trip to the White Mountains of New Hampshire, USA. We stayed in a cabin deep in the woods, and as there was no technology or TV, we actually sat around the table and chatted around the kerosene lamp late into the evening (for the non-Luddites in the forums, this was actually a *good* thing, try it).

We had some college alumni and a couple graduate students from other nations in the group. One very amusing topic that came up was "What do chickens/roosters say in your language?" It was interesting as, save for Antarctica, every continent has chickens and most people have some minimal passing exposure to what a chicken is. Chickens transcend borders and differences in politics, religion, economics, and language. Chickens are ubiquitous. Chickens are the perfect ice-breaker conversation topic in a multi-cultural setting.

In the U.S., roosters say "Cocka-Doodle-Do!"
In Turkey, roosters say "Kika-kika-Dee!"

Any other variations?
 
In Russia, "Koo-ka-ree-kuu!", Кукареку.

It's really interesting, people seem to remember sounds in fonemes of their languages - ever noticed how remembered sound of a car crash slowly fades from sharp non-lingual notes to something like "Tuh!-drata-bzdeen' " over time?
 
ever noticed how remembered sound of a car crash slowly fades from sharp non-lingual notes to something like "Tuh!-drata-bzdeen' " over time?

Um, no. I guess I don't hear car crashes that often. Maybe I should drive more aggressively? :lol:
 
German: Kikerikiiii... (add arbitrary number of i's) (phontical english: keekereekeeeeeee)

Swiss german: Gügerügüüüü (phonetical english: don't even try. You don't have that sound anywhere...)

Bosnian Kukurikuuu (Kookooreekoo)
 
Here, roosters 'say' "co-co-ro-co", similar to what Izack said.
 
:censored:-a-doodle-doo, extra o UK spelling....

N.
 
Same in English here, not sure about other languages.

I do know though, that roosters on O-F say CENSORED-a-doodle-doo... :rofl:
 
Haha, this topic is always amusing. We wasted a whole day in German class over this. Roosters saying Kikerikii. Frogs make a quack-like sound, and a whole bunch of interesting things.
 
Same in English here, not sure about other languages.

I do know though, that roosters on O-F say CENSORED-a-doodle-doo... :rofl:

Yeah, the forum apparently has the "George Carlin 7 words you can't say on O-F" filter. I'm sure we'll manage.

---------- Post added at 11:46 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:42 PM ----------

Frogs make a quack-like sound

Hmm...frogs might also be an ubiquitous lifeform on Earth. What do they have to say?

"Ribbit" is pretty much typical for the U.S., but it doesn't really describe the sound of wood frogs and peepers.
 
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In dutch: Kukeleku.
Frogs here say Kwak, kwak.
Same as ducks.
Lazy people, the dutch.
 
Swiss german: Gügerügüüüü (phonetical english: don't even try. You don't have that sound anywhere...)

Actually, in some western American dialects, "oo" (that is: /u/) gets close (at least, as long as Swiss "ü" is [y] as it is for other German dialects).

On one occasion I've had a German speaker mistake my attempt at saying "wurde" for "würde". The correct pronunciation often sounds to me like "worde".

Basically, in this chart German "u" is , western American "oo" is [ʉ], and German "ü" is [y]:
IPA_vowel_chart_2005.png
 
Rooster can't talk so he don't say anything.
 
Rooster can't talk so he don't say anything.

Tell that the rooster. Only because you fail understanding their language, this doesn't mean they don't speak...
 
Tell that the rooster. Only because you fail understanding their language, this doesn't mean they don't speak...

If I tell this to rooster I doubt he will understand. :P

---------- Post added at 09:52 PM ---------- Previous post was at 09:47 PM ----------

They do speak...


and chat...

[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=54-bmOqzjTE&feature=related"]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=54-bmOqzjTE&feature=related[/ame]
 
You see... ok, most roosters just say "I am the greatest! I am the greatest!" in their language.
 
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