Quote:
Quote by: Jason Your founding assumptions are simply untrue. What you perceive as "pretty much…alike" are just as disparate as adult human voices. You're simply not trained (or physically able) to distinguish. This is the same reason native Germanic language speakers can't always distinguish between "v" and "w," or why you can't pronounce half of the Danish vowels (or tell the difference between them, really).
Anyway, dogs yelp similarly just as people scream similarly. That doesn't mean they don't have different voices. |
Hmm? Perhaps. Longwood does not sound like Houston but they have something in common none the less.
Even so a female voice sounds higher pitched then a male voice (even if animals might have the same sort of thing going on) and so what is the reason for that? Let me look down this thread first and see what others have to comment.