Thanks for explaining clearly how to pronounce the German vowel sounds. I am hard of hearing and it’s a challenge for me to imitate the vowel and consonant sounds correctly. You helped me well enough to pronounce the vowels by imitating you as closely as I can when I hear you say the words. I wish I could pronounce them back to you so you can check my pronunciation. Great video, thanks!👍👍👍👍👍
That you for this video. I've been referring back to it a lot. I love the comparison to english words. Some of the comparable english vowels I wouldn't have recalled in isolation if you hadn't done that. I am now pretty sure I can pronounce all these vowels. Still can't hear the difference between the short and long ü, and bound kind of sound like u to me. But knowing they're rounded version of short and long i I can at least make the difference even if I can't hear it. Don't know how to train my ear, but at least you help me train my tongue :)
Diego, does a syllable need to be both open AND stressed in order to take long vowels, or it's enough for a syllable to be only closed or only stressed in order to take a long vowel? For example: the /e:/ is a long vowel. Lehrer has the syllable division LEH.RER; the LEH syllable is closed but even so it took the long vowel (instead of an short vowel) /e:/. Does it happen because LEH is a stressed syllable, and stressed syllables usually takes long vowels even if they (the stressed syllables) are not open?
3:11 i:
4:02 y:
4:54 i
5:46 y
6:45 e:
7:50 ø:
8:36 ɛ
9:19 œ
10:06 a
11:36 ə
11:33 ɐ
13:56 u
14:45 ʊ
Thanks for explaining clearly how to pronounce the German vowel sounds. I am hard of hearing and it’s a challenge for me to imitate the vowel and consonant sounds correctly. You helped me well enough to pronounce the vowels by imitating you as closely as I can when I hear you say the words. I wish I could pronounce them back to you so you can check my pronunciation. Great video, thanks!👍👍👍👍👍
Thanks, Frank!
That you for this video. I've been referring back to it a lot. I love the comparison to english words. Some of the comparable english vowels I wouldn't have recalled in isolation if you hadn't done that. I am now pretty sure I can pronounce all these vowels. Still can't hear the difference between the short and long ü, and bound kind of sound like u to me. But knowing they're rounded version of short and long i I can at least make the difference even if I can't hear it. Don't know how to train my ear, but at least you help me train my tongue :)
está bien vergas tu acento británico :D
Diego, does a syllable need to be both open AND stressed in order to take long vowels, or it's enough for a syllable to be only closed or only stressed in order to take a long vowel?
For example: the /e:/ is a long vowel. Lehrer has the syllable division LEH.RER; the LEH syllable is closed but even so it took the long vowel (instead of an short vowel) /e:/. Does it happen because LEH is a stressed syllable, and stressed syllables usually takes long vowels even if they (the stressed syllables) are not open?
Hola disculpa quitaste la explicación en español?? :,)
Well done, Diego!
This is the best video
Hola, muy buen video, puedes resubirlo en español?
Sorry - what is this "German is an enretic accent", at 13:16? I haven't heard this term nor could find it.
non-rhotic accent
Excellent
Merci.
explicalo en español por fa, gracias por tu aporte!
Ya tiene un video explicado en español
Hello teacher dónde consigo un diccionarios con la palabras con el IPA en idioma alemán. Gracias
En internet sólo debes buscar no seas flojo
Is german your native language?
It seems you are teaching complicated physics
Hazlo pero en español, quiero aprender alemán, muchas gracias
Ya hizo un video de eso en español, pero ya hace mucho
Your explaining is nothing bad