
This month’s cat vocabulary is the word vet. Not someone cats always like, but have to deal with at times. I don’t blame cats for not liking the vet. I don’t care to see doctors that much either.
But sometimes it is necessary. Check ups can be helpful especially if a cat doesn’t complain when something goes wrong inside of their bodies. Cats are famous for hiding their various ailments and illnesses so that other predators don’t know.
It’s a survival instinct. I can’t say I blame them. It’s not always good to complain about every little thing. It will just make us all sicker and more miserable.
Depending upon what it is, we and cats can get better with or without medical intervention. We just have to make sure we can take care of ourselves and know when it’s time to ask for help.
Saying Vet in European Languages (source)
Language Ways to say vet
Albanian: veteriner
Basque: albaitaria
Belarusian: ветэрынарны ўрач
Bosnian: veterinar
Bulgarian: ветеринар
Catalan: veterinari
Croatian: veterinar
Czech: Vet
Danish: dyrlæge
Dutch: dierenarts
Estonian: loomaarst
Finnish: eläinlääkäri
French: vétérinaire
Galician: veterinario
German: Tierarzt
Greek: κτηνίατρος(ktiníatros)
Hungarian: állatorvos
Icelandic: Dýralæknir
Irish: VET
Italian: veterinario
Latvian: veterinārs
Lithuanian: veterinaras
Macedonian: ветеринар
Maltese: vet
Norwegian: veterinæren
Polish: weterynarz
Portuguese: veterinario
Romanian: veterinar
Russian: ветеринарный врач(veterinarnyy vrach)
Serbian: ветеринар(veterinar)
Slovak: zverolekár
Slovenian: vet
Spanish: veterinario
Swedish: veterinär
Ukrainian: ветеринарний лікар(veterynarnyy likar)
Welsh: milfeddyg
Yiddish: וועטערינאַר
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