Some cats may not meow frequently because they have learned other ways to communicate, such as through body language or other vocalizations. Additionally, some cats may be naturally quieter or less vocal than others.
No. Cats will vocalize around other cats, and a mother cat will meow to call her kittens.
Typicly, all cats do meow unless something has happend to the cat at birth or otherwise. Every cat that has not been "changed" in some way will meow. Some cats like cougars and anything in that sort DO meow, just they all let out a more fierce growl. Hope this helps!
Yes, some cats may be physically unable to meow due to medical conditions or genetic factors.
Some cats may not be able to meow due to physical or genetic reasons, such as a deformity in their vocal cords or a neurological condition.
Yes, some cats can be mute and may not meow or make vocal sounds, while others have the ability to meow or make vocal sounds.
Feral cats meow to communicate with other cats or humans. They may meow to express hunger, fear, or to seek attention.
Cats meow to communicate with humans, not with other cats. In the wild, adult cats typically only meow to communicate with their kittens.
The cat's meow is her way of communicating with people. Cats meow for many reasons—to say hello, to ask for things, and to tell us when something's wrong. Meowing is an interesting vocalization in that adult cats don't actually meow at each other, just at people.
because meow! drives dogs crazy and the curiosity killed the cat
a cats voice
Some cats meow silently because they have learned to communicate without making noise, using body language and other subtle cues to express themselves.
they meow sometimes or purr not only purr is to show happiness but it shows that cats purr when they are ill (like they don't feel well) cats do not cry tears but they meow or show you attention that they need something