Episode 11

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Published on:

25th Aug 2025

Danespeak: Words & Woofs

Hello, hello! And welcome - to Danes Delight, the podcast where I, your friendly neighborhood Great Dane, Yeti, tell you what life looks like from down at paw level, though let’s be honest, I’m taller than most coffee tables. Some even say I’m a sofa with legs.

Today we’re diving into a question humans love to wonder about: How many words does a dog like me actually understand? Spoiler alert: it’s more than you think, and sometimes a lot less, depending on how distracted I am by snacks.

You humans are a funny bunch. Always talking, talking, talking. Words spill out of you like kibble pouring from a bag. But here’s the thing. we dogs don’t need all of those words. We tune our satellite ears to the ones that matter.

Researchers have actually measured this. Average dogs tend to understand between 100 and 200 human words. The star students—Border Collies, German Shepherds, and the occasional show‑off poodle—may know closer to 1,000.

Now, where does a Great Dane like me fall? Well, we’re not exactly known for being professors of linguistics. We’re more the "gentle giant, strong cuddle, occasional clumsy tail-wag that knocks over lamps" type. But don’t count me out—we do listen. Trust me, if you say “walk,” “treat,” or “outside,” my ears perk up faster than you can say “who’s a good boy?”

Let me give you my personal dictionary of “must‑know” terms:

Food Words: "Dinner," "treat," "cookie," "bone." Offer me those and I don’t just understand and I teleport.

Adventure Words: "Walk," "outside," "car ride." These are like golden tickets to the chocolate factory… except, I can’t have chocolate.

People Words: "Grandma," "Mom," "Pup Cup." Yes, I know who Grandma is, and I know exactly which humans sneak me snacks under the table.

Trouble Words: "No," "drop it," "off." I understand those too, even if I pretend sometimes that my giant ears didn’t catch it.

If I counted them right, I probably know at least 150 words—and pick up new ones all the time. The trick? Tone of voice. You humans could say “grapefruit” in the same tone as you say “walk,” and I’d probably bounce to the door ready to go.


So how do we learn words? It’s not like we’re thumbing through dictionaries. We connect sounds to actions or rewards. For example:

You say "sit," I bottom down, I get a treat. Boom! Word locked in.

You say "vet," I suddenly remember something about thermometers in unpleasant places… and I vanish to the other room.

Over time, we also learn patterns. You don’t even have to say the word "walk" anymore. If I see shoes going on and a leash rattling, I know what’s about to happen. Dogs are body-language experts. But toss in the right word, and I have confirmation that my guess is correct.


Now, let’s be honest, I don’t know Shakespeare, and I’m never going to recite poetry. I’m not memorizing grocery lists or solving crossword puzzles. If you’re debating philosophy, most of your words are just pleasant background noise to me—kind of like a lullaby.

But here’s a secret: what matters most isn’t the vocabulary size, it’s the connection. I may not know 1,000 words, but I really know the ones you say with warmth, love, and that funny voice you use when scratching behind my ears. Those are the words that make my tail thump instantly.


Sometimes, just for fun, I like to test my humans. They’ll whisper a word across the room—“cookie…”—thinking I won’t hear. But these ears? Giant radar dishes. I hear, I process, and I’m in the kitchen faster than thunder.

Other times, they’ll try to outsmart me by spelling words: “Maybe we should take him for a W‑A‑L‑K.” Newsflash humans: we cracked that code ages ago. Start spelling "park," I’m already at the door.


So, how many words does a Great Dane understand? Enough. Enough to make life full of fun, connection, and, of course, food. I’ll never use words like you do, but I’ll always understand the important ones: love, good boy, walkies, and treat.

And more than any single word—you know what we dogs understand best? Your heart. The way you look at us, the kindness in your voice, the belly rubs after a long day. That speaks louder than any dictionary you could ever hand me.


So that’s it for today’s episode of Danes Delight. I hope I’ve given you a peek into the giant, floppy-eared world of how words sound from my paw-spective. Remember—your dog might not know every word you say, but the words that matter most? Oh, we’ve got those mastered. Visit Grdane dot com for more info about Great Danes. Gotta go, I hear the sofa calling me.

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About the Podcast

Danes Delight by Yeti
Weekly Tuesday episodes with Yeti — a sarcastic, wise, brutally-honest Great Dane — delivering real life common-sense, mindset upgrades, hilarious observations, and big dog perspective.
Hi human. I’m Yeti — a brindle Great Dane with a brain bigger than a UPS truck and opinions stronger than the peanut butter jar lid I once chewed off. Welcome to “Dane’s Delight by Yeti” — the weekly Tuesday podcast where I, a Great Dane who understands humans absurdly well, explain life, break it down, laugh at it, and give advice you never knew a dog could give.

But here’s the twist:

I’m not just another dog.
I’m the dog who sees your world more clearly than you do.

Humans overcomplicate everything — careers, relationships, hustle culture, phones, buying stuff you don’t need, worrying about future catastrophes that statistically won’t even happen, comparing your life to strangers online… when all along, the only creature in the room who actually lives the present moment correctly… is the Great Dane.

That’s me.
I’m your case study.

Every Tuesday, I bring the ancient wisdom of “The Big Dog Perspective.”

What is that?

It’s the science and philosophy of:

– stretching long before you chase anything
– napping is a power strategy, not a sign of laziness
– loyalty isn’t something you SAY… it’s something you DO
– most fights aren’t worth it
– simple pleasures are the highest pleasures
– sniff curiosity first, judge later
– state your boundaries clearly — and don’t apologize for them

Humans have entire industries selling courses on “mindset.”

Great Danes are born with it.

Humans have self-help gurus.

Dogs ARE the self-help gurus.

Humans need a therapist + a meditation app + a productivity hack.

Great Danes just step into sunshine.

I don’t need a masterclass.
I am the masterclass.

And every week on “Dane’s Delight by Yeti,” I break your complicated existence down into simple, hilarious, sharp, sometimes savage common sense… in a way only a giant dog who has seen humans at their weirdest can.

Expect episodes like:

– “Why humans settle for crumbs when they could ask for steak”
– “The psychology of sniffing everything”
– “How humans ruin their own mood scrolling the rectangle of doom”
– “Big dog confidence vs small dog attitude”
– “Yeti’s guide to not panicking over nothing”
– “Why your goals suck — and how to fix them”

And yes — there will be relationship advice.

Trust me — I’ve overheard enough human couples argue over the dumbest stuff imaginable — and I’ve learned what actually matters.

Because while humans talk in circles, Great Danes know exactly what we want:

comfort, loyalty, treats, peace, good naps, and someone we actually like being around.

Relationships are simple.
Humans are complex.

I’m here to reverse it.

This is not a motivational speaker podcast.
This is not therapy.
This is not personal development with fake smiles.

This is a Great Dane telling you the truth you already know — without fear, without filters, without trying to sound “professional.”

This is COMMON SENSE… delivered by a 160-pound philosopher who drools.

I don’t need to be fancy — I just need to be REAL.

And once you start thinking like a Great Dane — your anxiety drops, your clarity increases, your priorities align, and your humor returns — because life gets fun again.

Come back every Tuesday.

Sit, listen, laugh, and learn.

Welcome to Dane’s Delight by Yeti — the only podcast where a Great Dane finally explains how humans should be living.

About your host

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Jerry Robertson