The Sabertooth tiger has been extinct for about 15,000 years, and there was no written languages we know of at that time, so early man had no way of passing on to us the sound he heard from the sabertooth. But given it's similarities in most ways to the the modern large cats, we can probably assume it sounded much like a tiger sounds today.
Sabertoothed tiger
The real scientific name for sabertoothed tigers of all ages was smilodon.
Generally, Thylacines (as Tasmanian tigers were properly called) did not make any sound. They were heard, on occasion, to make a quick yipping sound. Tasmanian tigers were not tigers, so they did not make a tiger-like growl.
There were many kinds of sabertoothed cats, and they varied in size from that of a large house cat to that of a tiger or lion, and some were even bigger. The classic saber toothed "tiger" is called Smilodon and the South American species could weigh up to 500 kgs!
sabertoothed tigers.
His roars are tiger snarls and growls.
No, The E in tiger has an unstressed or 'schwa' sound, which sounds like "er" or "ur" when followed by an R.
No. it tries to be silent so that when the pray is near it will not hear it coming, and then the Bengal tiger goes for the pray.
"Tiger" has a short vowel sound. The "i" in "tiger" is pronounced as a short /ɪ/ sound, rather than a long vowel sound like in words such as "time" or "tire."
roer
roars
with its antenas....