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If you hear parrots in the wild they all seem to have similar calls and noises, but parrots in captivity seem to copy the sounds of their surroundings. I recon a parrot will use a sound to best describe its feelings, it might say hello but the pitch and tone of the 'hello' might mean something completely
different to the parrot. I beleve it may be possible to train a parrot to use the correct words to speak its thoughts using expressive tones and repeating words in certain situations. Also if you could record common calls of wild parrots and translate them into english you could 'rewire' a parrots sound database in this way.
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Annotation:
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I fine proposition young one |
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I saw this parrot language lady speak once.(link) Also the parrot. It is exactly what you propose, [kill]. |
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couldn't you hear her bung? you should have yelled "louder!" |
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Cor! I fink ee's got somefink, ear. |
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Didn't some woman in the US teach a macaw more than 300 words in English? |
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Personally, I think parrot sounds closer to Cantonese than to English. |
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[po]; I did just that, then yelled a lot of other things in addition. Things got pretty unruly. I wound up getting a bad parrot bite before the cops cleared the hall. |
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I've got the scars, to prove it. |
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//couldn't you hear her bung?// |
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//no such thing as a good parrot bite//
Depends on if you go for breast or wing. |
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bung, couldn't you hear her? |
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'Ello, Mister Polly Parrot! I've got a lovely fresh cuttle fish for you if you show... |
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I'd love it if the parrot could tell us what it was thinking. Actually I'd rather know what my dog was thinking - especially when its dreaming - but I guess we are more likely to be able to teach a parrot to talk than a dog given its ability to make recognisable sounds. |
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I've always assumed that, to the parrot, the sound of saying "pretty Polly" has no relation to the actual meaning of the words it is saying and it just treats it as another 'song' in its repertoire. What would we do if the parrot said "Oh evil humans free me and my kind from the torturous imprisonment of your oppression."? |
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Remember reading about a parrot who obviously linked words of human speech and their meaning, if in a rudimentary way. |
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Apparently the owners taught the parrot to understand a few commands and used "Step up" to tell him to climb onto their arm or a stick so they could take him out of his cage. After a while when he decided he wanted to come out or when the owners opened the cage door he used the same phrase. So he showed that he understood the link between the phrase "Step up" and being let out of his cage. |
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He could also tell certain foods, people and other animals apart and name them. |
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