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- pronunciation - How do you phonetically pronounce all of the German . . .
What is the phonetic pronunciation of every note name in German? So, all three iterations of every letter (flat, natural, and sharp) including E#, Cb, etc Also, how do you pronounce the German note names “B” and “H”? Is there a German equivalent for the English “B#” (such as “H#”?) and how would that be pronounced phonetically?
- pronunciation - Why is the Ch in Chiemsee Cham not [h] but [k . . .
Regarding the pronunciation of CHS, it is a regional thing It is well-known that English has different regional pronunciations There are typical differences in the way people from the U S , England, New Zealand, etc pronounce different words It is the same with German
- pronunciation - W → V, V → F. Why do German speakers wrongly transpose . . .
Much of the confusion that arises when Germans pronounce words containing the letter V comes from the inconsistent pronunciation of V in German where it can be pronounced like W or like F e g : Vase [ˈvaːzə] pronounced like W Vogel [ˈfoːɡl̩] pronounced like F Germans are uncertain on how to pronounce such a word when it is not well
- pronunciation - In written German, how can I tell whether s is . . .
There is no truly general rule for loan words For some, it depends on the origin language’s pronunciation of the word in question For others, the rules given above apply as if it were a German word Many loanwords may not be recognised as loanwords due to their inherently German pronunciation (e g Maske) Examples: Retention of pronunciation:
- pronunciation - Is Liszt really pronounced like the English word list . . .
The Hungarian pronunciation is exactly as @g kertesz says: it is a short vowel, but with the quality of the English long vowel in least Scots English pronounces least this way (By the way, liszt means flour in Hungarian; but this is not the origin of the name Liszt ) –
- pronunciation - How is “ch” pronounced correctly? - German Language . . .
The pronunciation of Grüß dich on that site is decent but doesn't sound like a native speaker's The r is rolled in a way that doesn't sound German The ü is ever so slightly off (possibly something about length or intonation)
- pronunciation - Cant find the difference between o, ö, u, und ü . . .
First of all: In German each vowel has a short and a long version, and it can be spoken closed and open, which produces different spoken sounds for the same written letter (»Mond« and »Tonne« are written with the same letter o, but the pronunciation is not exactly the same; There are at least four different pronunciation for the letter e)
- pronunciation - How to pronounce the g at the end of König or Leipzig . . .
This pronunciation is the dominant pronunciation north of (about) the line Karlsruhe - Stuttgart - Ingolstadt - Passau, with exceptions mentioned below The majority of German native speakers live in this area, and it's also the pronunciation that German speaking actors learn ( Siebssche Bühnensprache ) during their actors education, even when
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