Well, I’m as surprised as you are about this discovery, but it seems some lame humour is actually enhanced by passing it through a language barrier.
Some monkeys make a noise to identify themselves within a group. That’s about as close as it gets to names, I think.
Wow… you and following men made me feel like… Was I wrong?:’(
I’d be glad if you tell me when you see my fucking english.
EDIT: I am Frozen Cham[eleon], not Frozen Charm
snap back…
Do the dogs think like us?
:3 : “What the hell is my ‘browruebrawrarr’(dog owner) talking to me?!”
Don’t feel so bad. Everyone adds an R to my name to :rolleyes:
Doesn’t change the fact that you’re from New Jersey.
The northern and south eastern parts are actually quite nice.
You mean, less awful?
Wait… what?
Also oops, I sort of skim over your name when I read it. My brain fills in the rest.
I’ve always wondered: Is that a typo or intentional?
everyone please add an r to my name
ok jerrry
I am not a goat pig, or the goat pig, I am Thee one and only Goat Pig. TheeGoatPig.
hercule poirots hurtsack?
Since “thee” is the informal word for “you”, I thought your name was “The eGoat Pig”.
EDIT:Never mind
I once went to a party where all the animals talked and I understood them.
…I do not wish to experience such a party again…
Animals are very… sexual…
those were party animals, not the kind we’re talking about here
:3
My bad.
probably not. a few species (whales, dolphins) do actually have languages with syntax, but a name is cross-generational identifier, and even the most intelligent animals wouldn’t have the cultural concept of generational progression which would necessitate naming. Every individual looks and sounds different, so why would there be a need for a specific identifying vocalization?
It probably is the eGoat Pig, but in Shakespearean English “Thee” can also mean “your” if I’m recalling correctly. Like the singular participle of “Thy.”
Dolphins have been found to at least have some concept of identity which they can transmit to others: https://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article714144.ece
‘Thee’ used to be the singular of ‘ye’ in Early Modern English. Now we just have ‘you’ for singular and plural. ‘Thy’ is the possessive form of ‘thou’. ‘Thee’ is the objective form of the word.