蜜桃恋人

What Is Your Cat Trying to Say to You?

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What does a meow or a purr mean? Find out what your cat is saying to you based on the meaning of cat sounds and body language.

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A Guide to Cat Body Language and Communication

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What does it mean when a cat meows? Here鈥檚 a look at what your cat is saying to you when it moves its ears, widens its eyes, rubs its nose on you, or uses any other cat body language!

Have you ever wondered what it means when your cat purrs? We know that you feel the love when they let you rub their belly, so find out what all these little gestures mean, according to Catspeak!

Because most of an animal鈥檚 speech involves body language, posture, and gesture, the key to understanding your cat is learning to read its body language. Vocal speech, in the sense of sounds with a particular meaning, also exists, but it is secondary. 

Most actions included here exist in combinations rather than singly. Thus, a cat with slit eyes and ears hard down will probably also be arched or tense, whereas a cat with narrowed eyes and ears slightly down and to the side may also be purring and will be relaxed.

When Cats Move Their Ears

  • If the ears are hard forward: The cat is alert, interested, and ready to move. If you鈥檙e holding your cat and the cat suddenly looks at something and pricks her ears forward, she may be getting ready to jump, either to pounce or to run.
  • If the ears are forward but relaxed: The cat is also relaxed, aware of her surroundings but not alarmed.
  • If the ears are slightly down and to the side: Usually seen when the cat is very relaxed and happy. Eyes will be closed or slit; the cat is usually purring.
  • If the ears are back but not flat: The cat is agitated, threatened, may jump or run away. The cat may also hear something behind it.
  • If the ears are flat back on the head: The cat is angry, threatened, frightened; may scratch if cornered.

Cat ears alert

What a Cat鈥檚 Tail Tells You

  • If the tail is high, relaxed, and waving: The cat is relaxed, happy, and confident.
  • If the tail is trailing behind the body but not held low: The cat is relaxed but alert.
  • If the tail is held low: The cat is cautious; it may be looking for a safe place, especially if the body is also held low to the ground.
  • If the tail is bristled: The cat is fearful or aggressive; other body cues will tell you which.

Cat Body Language

  • If the back is arched, the cat is on its toes, standing sideways-on: The cat is fearful and may fight, but will probably run.
  • If the back is arched, and the cat is standing face-on: The cat is aggressive and will almost certainly fight.
  • If the body is relaxed, soft, feet tucked under or kneading: The cat is relaxed.
  • If it rolls on its back: The cat is very relaxed and trusting. A cat does this when it is absolutely confident of safety. It may also be asking you to play or rub its stomach (proceed at your own risk).

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Cats Communicate with Their Eyes

  • If the eyes are wide: The cat is alert. Other cues will tell you if the cat is relaxed or threatened.
  • If the eyes are narrowed: The cat is alert, but may be fearful or aggressive. Look for other cues.
  • If the eyes are lazily open or closed: The cat is relaxed.
  • Pupil dilation is also important: Wide pupils can signal high interest, excitement, or possibly fear or aggression.

Cat Cues from Whiskers

  • If the whiskers are hard forward: The cat is alert, interested, perhaps sees a threat, prey, or food.
  • If the whiskers are back: The cat is calm, and relaxed.
  • If the whiskers are bristled: Usually seen with other cues that indicate fear or aggression.

Cat Voices: What Does a Meow or Purr Mean?

Meow: Cats tend to use meows more with humans than with other cats, though there are exceptions. To communicate with each other, they use a range of vocal signals, and some cats will use meows in this case, too. Kittens mew loudly when they鈥檙e hungry or frightened, but once they鈥檝e stopped being dependent on their mother, they also stop this kind of calling behavior. When you hear your cat meowing, it is generally talking to you鈥攕o pay attention!

Hiss: This is fear and threat. The cat is saying, 鈥淏ack off.鈥 Depending on how confident the cat feels or whether it is in its own territory, it may fight or run. You can use the hiss to tell your cat to stop doing something鈥攖his will get its attention and usually stop the behavior.

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Yowl: This is a step up from the hiss and is definitely a threat. The sound is 鈥渨ow-wow-wow,鈥 but modulated: 鈥渨oOOOowwwoooOOOoowwwooOOOoow,鈥 with the middle of each 鈥渨ow鈥 rising both in pitch and volume. A cat making this sound is getting ready to fight and may scratch if you try to touch it. Use the yowl to move a strange cat off your property. Yowling can also indicate discomfort or emotional upset. A smothered or muffled yowl may indicate a hairball coming up.

Purr: The jury is still out on precisely how the purr is produced. It may be a vocalization, or it may be produced by some other means. However it鈥檚 produced, this is a multipurpose sound. The purr usually indicates relaxation, trust, and well-being, and a cat may purr itself (and you!) to sleep. A nursing mother will purr while the kittens nurse, and they purr along with her. This seems to be a bonding and reassuring sound related to the later adult 鈥渞elaxed鈥 purr. Adult cats often purr while grooming each other.

Occasionally, a cat will insert a trilling sound into the purr. You usually hear this when you鈥檙e holding and petting the cat, not when the cat is simply purring to itself or another cat. This is referred to as 鈥渟inging.鈥

Cats also purr over prey. There is a theory that the purr acts as a hypnotic on the prey animal and reduces its struggling. 

Finally, an injured cat will sometimes purr, but the purr is deeper, raspier, and quite loud. While the relaxed purr, the nursing purr, and the trill are accompanied by kneading, the prey purr and the pain purr usually are not.

Chirp: This is an abbreviated sound, 鈥減rrt鈥 or 鈥減rrt?鈥濃攁lmost like a purr cut short. It usually happens as a greeting between cats who know each other well. Cats will also sometimes use the chirp to respond to a human voice. Some cats make a chattering sound, very soft and sometimes accompanied by a silent or almost-silent meow. They usually do this when they鈥檙e frustrated by seeing prey that they can鈥檛 get at, like that squirrel dancing in front of the window.

Cat Gestures

Finally, cats make a number of very communicative gestures.

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  • Kneading: This is a holdover from kitten behavior. A nursing kitten kneads its mother鈥檚 belly to promote the flow of milk. An adult cat may knead a person who is holding it to indicate contentment. If the cat鈥檚 claws are sharp, this can be a painful experience! A contented cat will sometimes extend and curl its toes (and extrude and withdraw its claws) while it鈥檚 purring, even if there鈥檚 nothing to knead.
  • Nose-rubbing: A cat that rubs its nose and cheek on you is marking you and indicating that you belong to it.
  • Arching: A cat that arches against you, sometimes even standing up on its hind feet, is asking for attention and wants to be petted or even picked up. A cat that flops against you is indicating trust.
  • Head butting: If your cat butts the top of its head against you, this is affection, pure and simple.
  • Grooming: Occasionally, cats will groom their people and may even bite gently. This is a variation on parent behavior, where an adult cat grooms a kitten and sometimes takes it gently by the nape to make it hold still. Cats will sometimes carry this affectionate behavior to the extent of rasping the skin away, so interrupt it before it gets to that point!

This is not completely exhaustive, but by paying attention to the rudimentary vocal and gestural vocabulary of your cat, you鈥檒l more easily be able to figure out what it is telling you鈥攁nd you鈥檒l be less likely to be scratched!

Love your cat? Learn about what signs your cat might give you when it鈥檚 sick.

About The Author

Elizabeth Creith

Elizabeth hails from Canada, owns a local pet shop and farm, and has an extended family of many, many cats! Read More from Elizabeth Creith
 

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