A word signifying no
Feb. 15th, 2008 01:03 pmWe have decided to try to teach the Bengals a word that will carry the meaning 'Bungles! No!'.
They know the word 'no' (although they often ignore it) but so do all the other animals, so if you dive in crying 'NO!' then everyone present freezes or flees. As the Bungles are the most confident and bumptious animals in the house, they tend to assume that the 'no' is for someone else, whereas roughly 80% of the time, it's an attempt to stop Bungles doing what Bungles do best: mischief!
I need a nice short word that is distinctive and doesn't sound like no. I was thinking maybe 'Bast'.
They know the word 'no' (although they often ignore it) but so do all the other animals, so if you dive in crying 'NO!' then everyone present freezes or flees. As the Bungles are the most confident and bumptious animals in the house, they tend to assume that the 'no' is for someone else, whereas roughly 80% of the time, it's an attempt to stop Bungles doing what Bungles do best: mischief!
I need a nice short word that is distinctive and doesn't sound like no. I was thinking maybe 'Bast'.
no subject
Date: 2008-02-15 03:28 pm (UTC)Strangely enough that was what I was considering suggesting instead of Bast :-D
We find that a Victoria Stilwell style 'Ah! Ah!' stops ours in their tracks.
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Date: 2008-02-15 04:03 pm (UTC)My concern is that one day, Mollydog may turn round and realise that Yama is really small and squishy and could be bitten in half rather easily. So far this has not happened, but it seems like a risk I don't want to take.
Frankly, I think Bungles are not as clever as normal moggies, and require Stern Measures. They are the cat equivalent of flubber: they just keep bouncing back!
no subject
Date: 2008-02-15 04:21 pm (UTC)