As a native German speaker and linguist, please note that some vowels shown here are wrong. The [ɐ] sound is completely mispronounced as an [o] sound. The [œ] sound is not the same sound as the u in hurt [hɜ̝ːt]. And in this video, it gets pronounced correctly only when within a word. When it is spoken seperately the speaker mispronounces it as [ø:]. When the speaker trys to pronounce [ə] seperately, she actually pronounces an [e:] sound. The [ɪ] sound is also mispronounced as an [i:] sound when spoken seperately. Same goes for [ʏ] and [y:] and for [ɔ] and [o:] and for [ʊ] and [u:]. Problem is that, in German, to every vowel ( vowel phonem to be correct) there is a long and a short version and Germans are not used to pronouncing the short versions seperately and longer. That's why the speaker here is mispronouncing all short vowels for long ones when she is trying to pronounce it seperately. Keep in mind, that when you have a letter like Ü or O, you always use the long version when you want to adress the letter/ say its name/ say it seperately. And when you want to say just "R" in German, you want to say [ɛɐ] and not an actual consonant sound. Also good to know is that many Germans do not roll their [ʁ] (one version of how you can pronounce the R in German at the beginning of a syllable. (You can choose from [ʁ], [R] and [r] and you only have to learn one of them.) If you find these sound symbols irritating then you should look up the IPA on Wikipedia. There you have listening samples of how the actual sounds sound like. There is also a Wikipedia entry on the German language and its phonetics so you can find a summary of various pronunciation rules. But Germans will understand you even if your pronunciation of R or Ü is not that clear or "native". Oh and last but not least, please, pronounce English words like English. With loanwords from other foreign languages like French or Russian, it's a little more complicated as those words have already been fully germanized over the past centuries.
@@TheZakev "Anglizismen" are usually imported english expressions which just exist in english with a distinct mainly professionell meaning..like for instance "Laptop", "Computer" and "Shareware" as well or many other computer based terms...or some business terms as well....and those are usually pronounced in english as well...I never ever heard someone saying in german "Shareware" or what ever "Anglizismus" in german pronunciation, honestly. "Denglisch" is a totally mix of german and randomly chosen english terms very often added with a german prefix or ending form ("germanized" so to say) used in one sentence although those therefore used english terms are not necessary to use because an equivalent german expression is already existing or most of the part had been always existed...like for instance to use in a german sentence "to check" by using a german ending form like "-en" (= checken) instead of using the regular german term "nachschauen" or the alternative german term "prüfen"..just things like that are called "denglisch"....the funniest example for "denglish" I´ve ever heard was the verb "gescreenshotet" (= german prefix "ge"+ english term "screenshot" which is a noun and not even a verb by the way + german ending "et") which ment that someone made a screenshot of his computer screen. There is simply a huge fundamental difference between "Anglizismen" which are pure english terms (=mainly necessary for a proper interaction respectively conversation) and "Denglish" which are just randomly chosen germanized english terms (=totally unnecessary for a proper interaction respectively conversation and which is more a sort of a youth-slang). And last but not least as an Austrian I can assure you - that all - has nothing to do with differences between Germany´s German and Austrian German at all simply because all those language differences between those 2 german speaking countries are just only and exclusively within the german language. Those have solely to do with many different german dialects + many different german accents even within Germany and also even within Austria as well. That´s more a bit like comparing British English with Scottish English or also with US-English where you also can find different dialects and different accents even within those 2 countries as well same as like as in German..or comparing British English or US-English with other english speaking countries like Australia, New Zealand etc
as someone whose been studying German since 2017, i've had a bit of difficulty pronunciation German words and it makes me sound funny, this definitely helps alot more!
People tell me that I sound like an American who learned three words in German. I am Ukrainian, but apparently I somehow pronounce German with an American accent
@James Baker Every language is "made from multiple languages". German has many English, French and Latin words. Some can be traced to all three like Komputer which is literally a counting maschine.
@@bertoldriesenteil1430 But depending how long it's part of German, pronounciation may vary. It becomes 'germanized'. English is much worse in this point, as they almost never keep the original pronounciation. Or as for German words, they keep the pronounciation, but not the spelling.
Having watched this video and being fluent in English and German myself, also having a degree in German Language and Litterature, I strongly advise viewers to spend their money elsewhere - and to handle all information herein with utmost care. The mistakes are not obvious to learners but essential!
For a start you spelt Literature wrong! Secondly, if then you do have a degree in German language then i don’t think you will have used this service offered by Emma. Therefore don’t be too hasty to try to thwart someone’s business. That’s not nice.
Ich spreche Bagel genau wie die Engländer aus. Ich hab noch nie gehört, dass jemand Ba-gel gesagt hätte... und bei Schaare-Waare kann ich gar nicht mehr aufhören zu lachen
I like how they'll say "[x] sound doesn't exist in English, that's why we'll teach you here" and then several of them are tagged with "this is the same sound as [x] sound in [y] word"
some people say you should not use this video to learn german, but they mistake the fact that it‘s about pronunciation and not vocabulary. Yes we do not say bagel or shareware in a german way, but if we would, it would sound the way shown in the video. It is just to get the idea behind the sounds.
3:17 nobody pronounces bagel in the German way, we basically never use the word because bagels aren’t very common here but if we say it we say it in english.
What a wonderful learning channel!! Please keep it up the great work, I'm Mexican so I see pronunciation vowels is the same in Spanish and German. It's easier to learn German being a Spanish speaker.
As a native English speaker-- learning Spanish, and German-- it actually doesn't surprise me, seeing that more than one European language rolls the "R". THAT has always been my Achilles heel.
Bagel is pronounced english in german and shareware isn‘t even a german word so it‘s pronounced english but apart from that I think this video could help many people with the pronounciation
I'm finnish, trying to learn german. Although my mother tongue is completely different it helps to know it. Some of the problems english speakers have with german pronunciation I don't. Tho when it comes to vocabulary knowing english helps a lot
@@HesseJamez True. For example ä and ö are easy for me. Also ü, though it's written as y in finnish. Also finnish has some germanic loan words which helps too
@@caller145 Your "H" is spoken like our "CH", the worst noise for any native (american) english speaker. Your "R" sounds more like the russian or bavarian one. Finnish is very phonetic, I'm a native german speaker and you'd understand me reading a finnish text - while I wont - but I can already sing along with Korpiklaani
@@HesseJamez that's awesome! I'm already far enough in my german skills to read a book and follow the plot... though I don't understand everything. I'm very shy when it comes to talking in a new language. My mom told me that I even started to speak as a baby only after I was able to form complete sentences
@@caller145 It's hard enough to form a single word with all its neccessary suffixes in finnish, haha...we're used to long words as well, but those are word-chains like "Jahreseinkommenssteuererklärung" (anual-income-tax-declaration). Otherwise Finns only need a single word to create a full sentence.
I also confirm that this video has many mistakes. The native speaking girl makes no difference for short and long vowels when she actually should demonstrate the isolated sounds. She says Hölle the right way with a short ö but demonstrates the sound itself with a long ö. Same mistake in every other vowel. She always makes the long vowel sound when she should do the short vowel sound which always is less stressed. Also she says ü for the y sound. That's wrong. It actually is a very short and less stressed sound between ü and i.
I am german and I haven't heard anyone says "BaGeL" pronounced like they did in the video... we say bagel with an English accent (more like "bäigl"). Or at least I and the people around me do...
9:14 These three words sound completely different. I am glad that we had Devnagari. Every sound is written and pronounced very accurately. European languages are stuck in these roman letters. Use same letters to depict different sounds and at the same time use different letters to depict the same sound.
Is this supposed to be based on the IPA (International Phonetic Alphabet)? Because if so, several vowels are presented with incorrect phonetic symbols.
@@zerosubscriberswithoutsubs7542 Alisa lisps. That's a no-go for a language teacher. She should see a speech therapist to help her to get rid of that bad habit.
Very interesting - but please be careful comparing to English sounds, when what you mean is American English sounds. They aren't always the same, eg the presenter says 'the sound in ought', but she pronounces 'ought' the way an English English-speaker would say 'art'.
I have to finish a 3 minute long video in Wich I have to speak perfect German and I have 2 days to finish it, I have to get a minimal grade of a 7/C, thank you ❤️
well most of the comments are complaining about them pronouncing it wrong and i also thought it was sounding weird i am begginer to german but and i don't know
If you are in Bavaria don't even try to communicate in German because you won't understand a single word of the Bavarian accent. I am from Bavaria and we once bought a car from a native speaking German person and they were like "wtf are you talking about" because of our accent 😂
7:05 You're telling me people can tell the difference between "a" and "a:" without context (on their own, not in a word)? Dahell... that sounded like the exact same sound to me 😵 Edit 8:56 Ok, no wonder it sounded the same, only the length changes 😅.
1:11 tho it's χ not x cuz it's more uvular than velar. 9:16 This "ɐ" is different than this "o". The "ɐ" is the "er" british ppl pronounce in "bettER", "biggER", "evER".
I could see Alisa is trying her best to control her naughtly laugh :) poor Alisa tied up here. I badly need to practise this over and over, a very good one for us to correct inthe early stages.
As a russian that can pronounce all the sounds from english (not correct at all, but if i speak slow and try my best tp put them in right place, i sound good). And guy that pronounce r in russian (native language) wrong(just like a german), and also can pronounce another sound from m ukrainian(if u don't know g in ukrainian is just the same of german r in some cases). I think i can pronounce the most of them. All the r's are mine, ö ä ü are easy only for me. And yes, she didn't say that "ts" is possible in english "beats/beasts/kids/pizza", and l is defferent. It's softer, it's another sound whitch isn't the same of english. So my mates say that i sound just like german(thay don't kniw this language, but they're sure)
I would say we make foreign Deutsch.i am 38 years now in Germany and my Accent in German is different. I could also recognize when an American or a Turk make German.
Just in the first 6 minutes i laughed so hard 😂 ..instead of using words as kindergarten or doppelganger, u used bagel? If we would say bagel, but we use it rarely in germany, we would pronounce it in the english way. If someone would ask me like the german pronunciation, i would have no idea what he/she wants from me 😅 .. and what is schaare-ware? Luckily this isn‘t about german words, it‘s about pronunciation. For every non german speaker, don‘t remember the words
Had to laugh at the use of the word Mykene or mycenae as an example. I have a very large vocabulary in English and a good sized one in German and NEVER heard them used in either one. Looked it up; a city in southern Greece in the bronze age... why would one use something so obscure as an example?!
bit.ly/3LwXkVY Click here and get the best resources online to master German grammar and improve your vocabulary with tons of content for FREE!
As a native German speaker and linguist, please note that some vowels shown here are wrong. The [ɐ] sound is completely mispronounced as an [o] sound. The [œ] sound is not the same sound as the u in hurt [hɜ̝ːt]. And in this video, it gets pronounced correctly only when within a word. When it is spoken seperately the speaker mispronounces it as [ø:]. When the speaker trys to pronounce [ə] seperately, she actually pronounces an [e:] sound. The [ɪ] sound is also mispronounced as an [i:] sound when spoken seperately. Same goes for [ʏ] and [y:] and for [ɔ] and [o:] and for [ʊ] and [u:]. Problem is that, in German, to every vowel ( vowel phonem to be correct) there is a long and a short version and Germans are not used to pronouncing the short versions seperately and longer. That's why the speaker here is mispronouncing all short vowels for long ones when she is trying to pronounce it seperately. Keep in mind, that when you have a letter like Ü or O, you always use the long version when you want to adress the letter/ say its name/ say it seperately. And when you want to say just "R" in German, you want to say [ɛɐ] and not an actual consonant sound.
Also good to know is that many Germans do not roll their [ʁ] (one version of how you can pronounce the R in German at the beginning of a syllable. (You can choose from [ʁ], [R] and [r] and you only have to learn one of them.) If you find these sound symbols irritating then you should look up the IPA on Wikipedia. There you have listening samples of how the actual sounds sound like. There is also a Wikipedia entry on the German language and its phonetics so you can find a summary of various pronunciation rules. But Germans will understand you even if your pronunciation of R or Ü is not that clear or "native". Oh and last but not least, please, pronounce English words like English. With loanwords from other foreign languages like French or Russian, it's a little more complicated as those words have already been fully germanized over the past centuries.
The whole video is doggy. I completely fail to see how it could useful for any German learner. Looks like someone just wants to sell some stuff...
Thank you so much! I'm a beginner but I felt the video is weird..
Stimmt
How do you pronounce 'u+r' "Kurz"?
I see some people roll r and say "kʊrʦ"
some say like an O "koʦ"
some say like 'nur' "kuːɐʦ"
thanks
You just saved me 3 hours.
It's half an hour of great free content and people come here to mention one specific mistake made...
Welcome to the internet lol
I am thankful they point out mistakes so I won't end up making them
mistake is a mistake
Even native speakers make mistakes. You're never going to speak perfectly. One mistake isn't a big deal.
@@littlestmacmuffin7998 You still will even natives do.
Shareware? Seit 1992 wohne ich in Deutschland, aber Schaare-Wahre ist mir ja wirklich neu.
Bradley McKenzie hallo
@@rpitit ICould you tell me this therm is called Denglsich(aka Anglizismen), or this is more Austrian German. Thanks
@@TheZakev "Anglizismen" are usually imported english expressions which just exist in english with a distinct mainly professionell meaning..like for instance "Laptop", "Computer" and "Shareware" as well or many other computer based terms...or some business terms as well....and those are usually pronounced in english as well...I never ever heard someone saying in german "Shareware" or what ever "Anglizismus" in german pronunciation, honestly.
"Denglisch" is a totally mix of german and randomly chosen english terms very often added with a german prefix or ending form ("germanized" so to say) used in one sentence although those therefore used english terms are not necessary to use because an equivalent german expression is already existing or most of the part had been always existed...like for instance to use in a german sentence "to check" by using a german ending form like "-en" (= checken) instead of using the regular german term "nachschauen" or the alternative german term "prüfen"..just things like that are called "denglisch"....the funniest example for "denglish" I´ve ever heard was the verb "gescreenshotet" (= german prefix "ge"+ english term "screenshot" which is a noun and not even a verb by the way + german ending "et") which ment that someone made a screenshot of his computer screen.
There is simply a huge fundamental difference between "Anglizismen" which are pure english terms (=mainly necessary for a proper interaction respectively conversation) and "Denglish" which are just randomly chosen germanized english terms (=totally unnecessary for a proper interaction respectively conversation and which is more a sort of a youth-slang).
And last but not least as an Austrian I can assure you - that all - has nothing to do with differences between Germany´s German and Austrian German at all simply because all those language differences between those 2 german speaking countries are just only and exclusively within the german language. Those have solely to do with many different german dialects + many different german accents even within Germany and also even within Austria as well. That´s more a bit like comparing British English with Scottish English or also with US-English where you also can find different dialects and different accents even within those 2 countries as well same as like as in German..or comparing British English or US-English with other english speaking countries like Australia, New Zealand etc
@@michaelgrabner8977 Lol, das war sehr ausfuehrlich erklaert. Sehr nett von dir. Jezt ist mir klar.
Ich bedanke mich und baba.
Wir haben das früher zum Spass so ausgesprochen.
as someone whose been studying German since 2017, i've had a bit of difficulty pronunciation German words and it makes me sound funny, this definitely helps alot more!
People tell me that I sound like an American who learned three words in German. I am Ukrainian, but apparently I somehow pronounce German with an American accent
When we use english words we pronounce them english not german.
This is called anglezismen and we use many english words.
Unknown Username *anglicism is the English word for it
They call them Neudeutsche here in Brandenburg and most are pronounced wrong. Dip dop for example.
@James Baker Every language is "made from multiple languages". German has many English, French and Latin words. Some can be traced to all three like Komputer which is literally a counting maschine.
@@bertoldriesenteil1430 Niemand schreibt Komputer. Man sagt und schreibt Computer oder Rechner
@@bertoldriesenteil1430 But depending how long it's part of German, pronounciation may vary. It becomes 'germanized'. English is much worse in this point, as they almost never keep the original pronounciation. Or as for German words, they keep the pronounciation, but not the spelling.
Having watched this video and being fluent in English and German myself, also having a degree in German Language and Litterature, I strongly advise viewers to spend their money elsewhere - and to handle all information herein with utmost care. The mistakes are not obvious to learners but essential!
Thank you!
For a start you spelt Literature wrong! Secondly, if then you do have a degree in German language then i don’t think you will have used this service offered by Emma. Therefore don’t be too hasty to try to thwart someone’s business. That’s not nice.
Ich spreche Bagel genau wie die Engländer aus. Ich hab noch nie gehört, dass jemand Ba-gel gesagt hätte... und bei Schaare-Waare kann ich gar nicht mehr aufhören zu lachen
Nobody says "Schare-Ware" statt "Shareware". One just uses the English pronunciation.
using english words
Shop, Touchscreen, Player, CD, Couch, Sofa, Intercity usw.
EasyJet EU *Bagel
Bagel is completely wrong, it is the same in german and english
I'm going to say "buh-gell" from now on, just to mess with people.
I like how they'll say "[x] sound doesn't exist in English, that's why we'll teach you here" and then several of them are tagged with "this is the same sound as [x] sound in [y] word"
some people say you should not use this video to learn german, but they mistake the fact that it‘s about pronunciation and not vocabulary. Yes we do not say bagel or shareware in a german way, but if we would, it would sound the way shown in the video. It is just to get the idea behind the sounds.
„Bagel“ is not a german word at all!
„Shareware“ is not a german word at all!
I just thought "wtf" 😂
Im German. ;)
Musste auch lachen.
@@SmudoMcFly Dann lacht mal schön als deutscher würde man "Bagel" ohne Englischkenntnis genau so lesen.
@@epicusmatzimus4151 Und deswegen darf ich das nicht lustig finden? (Satzzeichen können Leben retten. "Komm, wir essen Opa.")
SHUT UP
I like learn 2 language English and German...so this is the best chanel.
3:17 nobody pronounces bagel in the German way, we basically never use the word because bagels aren’t very common here but if we say it we say it in english.
This sound is identical to /makes a completely different sound/ :D
thank you for this video. We understand that this lesson has the intention to explain the pronunciation and sounds! everything is ok
What a wonderful learning channel!! Please keep it up the great work, I'm Mexican so I see pronunciation vowels is the same in Spanish and German. It's easier to learn German being a Spanish speaker.
eso es verdad
As a native English speaker-- learning Spanish, and German-- it actually doesn't surprise me, seeing that more than one European language rolls the "R".
THAT has always been my Achilles heel.
If they would teach you nonsense, you wouldn't notice. So be careful calling something wonderful.
I am learning German .It is a wonderful language .
Bagel is pronounced english in german and shareware isn‘t even a german word so it‘s pronounced english but apart from that I think this video could help many people with the pronounciation
This course was excellent! Thank you!
It's funny to see this as a German! Really nice Tutorial! Weiter so!
I'm finnish, trying to learn german. Although my mother tongue is completely different it helps to know it. Some of the problems english speakers have with german pronunciation I don't. Tho when it comes to vocabulary knowing english helps a lot
Finnish and german pronunciation is very similar. English is a germanic language and has many match words with german.
@@HesseJamez True. For example ä and ö are easy for me. Also ü, though it's written as y in finnish.
Also finnish has some germanic loan words which helps too
@@caller145 Your "H" is spoken like our "CH", the worst noise for any native (american) english speaker. Your "R" sounds more like the russian or bavarian one. Finnish is very phonetic, I'm a native german speaker and you'd understand me reading a finnish text - while I wont - but I can already sing along with Korpiklaani
@@HesseJamez that's awesome! I'm already far enough in my german skills to read a book and follow the plot... though I don't understand everything. I'm very shy when it comes to talking in a new language. My mom told me that I even started to speak as a baby only after I was able to form complete sentences
@@caller145 It's hard enough to form a single word with all its neccessary suffixes in finnish, haha...we're used to long words as well, but those are word-chains like "Jahreseinkommenssteuererklärung" (anual-income-tax-declaration). Otherwise Finns only need a single word to create a full sentence.
I’m not a native English speaker so let’s learn a lot!
That's an advantage lol
I speak Spanish, that makes this way too easy also thanks for the video.
Schöne Grüße aus Deutschlan viel Erfolg beim lernen :)
We've missed you Alisa! Would love more videos from you
I'm not watching this video to actually learn german .. I just love the girl that teach german pronunciation :))))
Very helpful for beginners. Learn together with my son. ❤️
I also confirm that this video has many mistakes. The native speaking girl makes no difference for short and long vowels when she actually should demonstrate the isolated sounds. She says Hölle the right way with a short ö but demonstrates the sound itself with a long ö. Same mistake in every other vowel. She always makes the long vowel sound when she should do the short vowel sound which always is less stressed. Also she says ü for the y sound. That's wrong. It actually is a very short and less stressed sound between ü and i.
I am german and I haven't heard anyone says "BaGeL" pronounced like they did in the video... we say bagel with an English accent (more like "bäigl"). Or at least I and the people around me do...
Hey, great Teacher Alisha I've been met you for everywhere. I will like having a daughter like you.
God blesses you everyday.
9:14 These three words sound completely different.
I am glad that we had Devnagari.
Every sound is written and pronounced very accurately. European languages are stuck in these roman letters.
Use same letters to depict different sounds and at the same time use different letters to depict the same sound.
Niiice, they did bunch of easy sound with tongue placement but R..... R without credit.
Is this supposed to be based on the IPA (International Phonetic Alphabet)? Because if so, several vowels are presented with incorrect phonetic symbols.
5% of comments - nice face ma lady
95% of comment - GERMAN DOES NOT HAVE BAGEL!!!1! DON'T WATCH THIS VIDEO
LOl
Well... This video has a lot of mistakes
Alisa's dreamy...
Das war sehr gut and hilfreich. Ich finde den r-Laut am schwierigsten. Ich werde üben.
Alisa is the best!! 😍she makes the learning easy and fun... 😍😍
kanney subramanyam She sucks at german tho
@@zerosubscriberswithoutsubs7542 Alisa lisps. That's a no-go for a language teacher. She should see a speech therapist to help her to get rid of that bad habit.
Axel Vetter That is nit even the biggest problem to be honest. A lot of the content presented in this video is simply straight up not true.
As a german I can't confirm
Very interesting - but please be careful comparing to English sounds, when what you mean is American English sounds. They aren't always the same, eg the presenter says 'the sound in ought', but she pronounces 'ought' the way an English English-speaker would say 'art'.
I have to finish a 3 minute long video in Wich I have to speak perfect German and I have 2 days to finish it, I have to get a minimal grade of a 7/C, thank you ❤️
@@KingKrule1 i got a 7 so pretty good :3
29:30 Yes, Alisa, you are definitely uber-cool.
At 4:14 the cases are described incorrectly. It says dativ (direct) and akkusativ (indirect). It should say dativ (indirect) and akkusativ (direct).
Zehr gut! Danke schon!
Very good thanks
Literally never heard someone say Bagel like that
Shareware, maybe 80 year olds who don't speak English
New subbie. German is very interesting to learn
what about "blood and honor" for the fatherland, my great grandmother was German.
well most of the comments are complaining about them pronouncing it wrong and i also thought it was sounding weird i am begginer to german but and i don't know
If you are in Bavaria don't even try to communicate in German because you won't understand a single word of the Bavarian accent.
I am from Bavaria and we once bought a car from a native speaking German person and they were like "wtf are you talking about" because of our accent 😂
Piet Er *laughing in austrian* 😂
Both Bavarian and Austrian are easy to understand. What can be troubling for Germans are some Swiss German accents.
This was super helpful. Vielen Dank!
Danke schön
It went over my head😇
FANTASTIC CLASS👍👏👏👏👏👏 CHARLES STAUDT FROM BRAZIL 🇧🇷🇩🇪
thanks a lot. brilliant youtube channel
All the 'fast track' talk has me intimidated. I need to start on a slow track, haha.
It is very nice.
Amazing. Thanks.
ich danke ihnen
In german we don’t say „sch“ if a h is after a s. The combination of „sh“ don‘t exist in german
7:05 You're telling me people can tell the difference between "a" and "a:" without context (on their own, not in a word)? Dahell... that sounded like the exact same sound to me 😵
Edit 8:56 Ok, no wonder it sounded the same, only the length changes 😅.
HI, BEAUTY QUEEN, THANKS A LOT FOR HELPING US. BLESS YOU.
Some minor errors and inaccuracies but in my opinion this'll help you pronounce German better.
This is so so so so cool
Don’t use this video. It’ll only confuse you. There are a lot of mistakes in it, which a linguist has pointed out below.
What is bagel?
1:11 tho it's χ not x cuz it's more uvular than velar. 9:16 This "ɐ" is different than this "o". The "ɐ" is the "er" british ppl pronounce in "bettER", "biggER", "evER".
einem is dative (indirect) einen is accusative (direct). You put them wrong way round
I could see Alisa is trying her best to control her naughtly laugh :) poor Alisa tied up here. I badly need to practise this over and over, a very good one for us to correct inthe early stages.
Pranish Bhaskaran PLEASE DONT! Half the stuff in this video is wrong.
After 30 minutes, I have a sore throat now.
As a russian that can pronounce all the sounds from english (not correct at all, but if i speak slow and try my best tp put them in right place, i sound good). And guy that pronounce r in russian (native language) wrong(just like a german), and also can pronounce another sound from m ukrainian(if u don't know g in ukrainian is just the same of german r in some cases). I think i can pronounce the most of them.
All the r's are mine, ö ä ü are easy only for me. And yes, she didn't say that "ts" is possible in english "beats/beasts/kids/pizza", and l is defferent. It's softer, it's another sound whitch isn't the same of english. So my mates say that i sound just like german(thay don't kniw this language, but they're sure)
I would say we make foreign Deutsch.i am 38 years now in Germany and my Accent in German is different. I could also recognize when an American or a Turk make German.
I just want to speak english with a german accent so when my grandsons are rotten I can yell, RELEASE THE SHARKS! Like the woman on Austin Powers.
do we have to pay some money also ??
It says at the beginning of the video sign up to get a free lifetime account "FREE" its still costs money
Danke 💓
Isn’t direct object Accusatif, not Datif?
I just realized my accent actually sounds gerrman naturally
ı learn german just for school ı dont have any friend to practice but my accent is too Turkish (Im from Turkey) I sound funny
I speak Arabic so those pronunciation is easy for me und we have also a letter no one can spell this letter is ق and ح search for it to know more 😁❤️
And خ and ظ ض I've seen many struggle with those
@@hoshishines yeah yeah right but you can be better
Just in the first 6 minutes i laughed so hard 😂 ..instead of using words as kindergarten or doppelganger, u used bagel? If we would say bagel, but we use it rarely in germany, we would pronounce it in the english way. If someone would ask me like the german pronunciation, i would have no idea what he/she wants from me 😅 .. and what is schaare-ware? Luckily this isn‘t about german words, it‘s about pronunciation. For every non german speaker, don‘t remember the words
wait you pronounce "aber" as "abah"??? my german teacher said to pronounce it like "ahbear"
Had to laugh at the use of the word Mykene or mycenae as an example. I have a very large vocabulary in English and a good sized one in German and NEVER heard them used in either one. Looked it up; a city in southern Greece in the bronze age... why would one use something so obscure as an example?!
This video is very fast. As i am a beginner, i have faced problems to understand. You should make the video in details and slowly in separation.
1:56 the symbols for "aber" and "Ober" are round the wrong way.
Seem complicated: yes
Was für Bagel?
The site is not free
No one says shareware or bagel that way in in Germany!
this sounds identical to the last one
"Öde" means boring, not dull.
HesseJamez what do you think does dull mean?
@@kampfrausch stumpf/abgenutzt.
Schaare waare, ernsthaft jetzt?!? Und Baagel? Please don't use this vid for learning German!
The rest was ok. These word are not necessary.
Es geht nicht um Vokabeln sondern im doe Aussprache.;)
You sure?
Ozan Gabrut Yes
@@HazeLeague not it was not ok..
alisa looks high in her videos :D does anyone know what she is been using before streaming videos :D
07:05 vowel sounds.
I cannot get the r at the back of the throat. Just sounds congested.
When they teach you how to pronounce the vowels, they don’t specify which letter they are talking about in the example words.
Excellent video...
Orhan Saim Demirtürk not
Vielen dank
is there app for translate german word to phonetic style?
Must trust the comments. Skipping video now!
9:18 - "aber" with an o-Sound?