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One of his slogans for this was "in Roma antiqua, etiam canes Latine locuti sunt" ('in ancient Rome, even the dogs spoke Latin').
This is why I only train my dogs in a pure functional language.
Many agencies, especially those new to having K-9 or small departments that may not be able to spend time dedicated to training from puppies, get dogs from Europe that are partially or fully trained. The lineage of the working dog breeds is much better in Europe because many breeds have bloodlines that haven't been bred for generations to be pets (like here in the US).
It's also why agencies pay so much for the dogs. Last I heard (I used to be more involved volunteering with my local PD) a fully trained dog was around $25k, USD, a partially trained was something like $8k - $10. It sounds like a lot until you realize a fully trained dog is 18—24 months old when acquired and has been training every day during that time.
In my city are four day marches in the summer where also international military participate. Before dawn, all these soldiers walk from the forest - where they sleep - to the starting point. It was customary for us as kids to wave to the soldiers and wish them good luck and ask for some souvenirs/stickers.
One day my friends had their dog with them and we learned the command 'luid' (loud in English, laut im Deutsch) so the dog would bark. Early in the morning, exhausted soldiers that did not even had their morning coffee, very quiet outside, and then the dog would bark them to shock with our little whispers of 'luid'. Good times.
informed is stronger than ignorant.
stay safe.
Our little buddy is the silver collar here, https://www.glaurungkennel.com/LitterK.html
1] regionally unfamiliar language, dog will obey your commands, but not commands of regional language.
2] parrallel handling, different dogs trained in different languages dont step on each others task,in response to the same cue command.
e.g. left dog, sprech im ze deutsch - right dog, govorite po russki
i get them mixed up when cold, but if speaking for a while i can get in a zone.
my spelling is atrocious i think i see where you complain:
Sprechen Sie Deutsch %:P
Oh wait, wrong Thread!
It also means "off" and – in sports – "offside", which I think is much closer to what "aus" means in this context.
The meaning in dog schools is "Spit it out", but given aus's versatility within human language, it's often used as a general "stop" command. As in "aus", stop playing.
It means something like "Spuck es aus", "Spit it out"
In this case Aus means out like in spit it out or out with it, "raus damit".
Which would be called Castle Woofenstein.
I trained her over 11 years ago using Michael Ellis videos and picked it up there. If she was younger I’d incorporate some more of these.
"Sitz!" for sit
"Down!" for down.
Fass!
You better know what it means when a dog owner points at you and says "Fass!".
There is a hilarious episode by German comedian Gerhard Polt about this word where he plays the owner of a Kampfhund (the genuine grandson of the great-uncle of the dog of Adolf Hitler) who goofs around alternating between "Fass!" and "Nicht Fass!" not realizing that the dog is not capable of distinguishing between the two.
https://youtube.com/watch?v=I5sFagE-zqw
(In German, obviously - the Bavarian kind)
32 Attack - Fass
https://www.fluentu.com/blog/german/german-dog-commands/#toc...