He’s a guide dog, so obviously very smart in some ways, but in other ways he’s very much still a dog. He’s still terrified of thunder and fireworks. While he’s normally aloof with occasional fits of cuddliness, when it’s loud outside he tries to climb into my skin.

I wish I could tell him “You’re fine, dude. The thunder is outside and you’re inside” in a way he understands.

But if you’ll permit me a linguistic tangent, you could take the concept of “talking dog” in a bunch of different directions.

  • Give him phonetically articulate human speech, but leave his mental faculties otherwise unchanged. He’d express his simple animal needs in a way that happens to correspond to words in a human language, and I would likewise be able to articulate simple concepts to him in a way he understands. Honestly not that far off from the array of push buttons thingy that we saw on YouTube a few years ago.

  • Make him fully sapient, but leave his vocal tract untouched, incapable of articulating human speech, but with the mental faculties to link symbols to meanings and form recursive ideas. A bunch of my constructed languages use this as a premise, talking dogs (or doglike aliens) that still sound like dogs.

  • queerlilhayseed@piefed.blahaj.zone
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    7 hours ago

    I bet if you did talk to him in a calm, soothing voice, and told him he was safe and that it won’t be forever, it would help. Dogs get a ton of cues from our words and demeanor even if they don’t understand exactly what is being said.

    If you want to see how well your dog can communicate with human words, you could get him a soundboard. It’s a relatively new area of research as far as I know but it looks like dogs have at least some facility with them.