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Cats - both housecats and outdoor cats, and feral cats to boot - will sometimes make an eerie sound that sounds very much like a human baby crying. It can be quite disconcerting, hearing what sounds like a baby crying outside my window (following by scrabbling and squawking, often).

Why do cats make this sound?

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  • Foxes, whilst outside the scope of this site, also make a very similar sound.
    – Henders
    Commented Dec 22, 2017 at 11:36
  • @Henders the foxes who live by us sound like screaming women or barking. I've never heard a baby sound.
    – Zaralynda
    Commented Dec 22, 2017 at 14:05
  • @Zaralynda It's bone chilling! It took me a good 20 minutes once to work out whether there was actually a child screaming outside or not...
    – Henders
    Commented Dec 22, 2017 at 14:11
  • terrible sound here we have both cats and foxes,it is a good thing the foxes are a litlle further away or one might go crazy. Commented Dec 22, 2017 at 15:02

2 Answers 2

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The cats you're hearing are most likely females in heat. The sounds afterwards may be male cats fighting over the female, or possibly the female scrabbling with the male, possibly rejecting him, or after mating.

Sometimes a cat's normal meow by random genetic variation, will sound more like a baby than is typical for a cat, also.

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African wildcats, domestic cats’ nearest relative, have a rather scary meow with a wide spectrum, though they don’t use it much around humans anyway. Ditto for other wild felids.

However, there is always some natural variation due to random mutation. Those cats that sounded less scary were more likely to be tolerated by the humans attracting all those yummy mice, which made those cats more likely to survive and produce offspring with that mutation.

This cycle was repeated for thousands of years, and the result is that domestic cats evolved to meow in the narrow frequency band that triggers the same instinctive human reaction that a crying baby does: feed this cute thing now so the noise stops.

However, cats have a pretty limited vocabulary, so the same meow gets reused for many other things, such as wanting to be petted, wanting to go outside, wanting to play, looking for mates, etc.

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