I know that squeals attract hogs if its coming from other hogs held a hog one time that was squealing and had about 8 come to it to help out
Grunts,Squeals,Growls and Roars
Loud squeals and cries and even grunts.
Wombats communicate through a variety of vocalisations. Their sounds include grunts, squeals, coughs, clicks and hisses.
Bears and baby bears make all kinds of squeals, coos and grunts depending on the circumstances. Bears also growl when they are threatened.
I don't know about oinking but they sure know how to squeal...but to answer your question, yes, though piglet oinks are less audible and more higher-pitched than a sow's, gilt's, barrow's or boar's oinks, grunts and squeals.
Pigs are not capable of speech in a way humans understand. This is true for every language. Even pig Latin.
Classically, pigs make an "oink" sound; this is mostly what is portrayed in children's books and other noncritical literature. However, a living pig makes a variety of noises including grunts, squeals and a rather wide range of "oink"-type sounds.
He squeals when he talks
"Squeals" can function as an action verb when it describes the specific action of emitting a high-pitched sound. However, it can also be used as a linking verb to connect the subject to a subject complement that describes the subject, such as in the sentence "The pig squeals loudly."
A giraffe can make several different sounds. They can mew or bleat to their mothers. They cough to attract mates. They also communicate by grunts, snorts and whistles.
A herd of hogs.
It squeals and screams.