10 more German brands YOU pronounce WRONG! | Feli from Germany

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  • Опубликовано: 16 май 2024
  • ++Reason for blurs/muted audio: This channel was renamed in Oct 2021. All references to the old name have been removed.++
    Start speaking a new language in 3 weeks with Babbel 🎉. Get 6 months FREE when you sign up for 6 months ➡️Here: rb.gy/axlxqg
    15 German brands YOU pronounce WRONG!▸ • 15 German brands YOU p...
    OKTOBERFEST explained by a Munich Native!▸ • OKTOBERFEST explained ...
    Video with Josh: AMERICAN FLUENT IN GERMAN! Our Bilingual Friendship▸ • AMERICAN FLUENT IN GER...
    More videos with Josh▸ • Videos with Josh
    More LANGUAGE related videos▸ • Language
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    PO Box 19521
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    USA
    -------------------------
    0:00 Intro
    2:05 Babbel
    4:22 Lidl
    6:27 Löwenbräu
    8:51 Allianz
    10:31 Siemens
    12:55 Bosch
    14:20 Bayer (Aspirin)
    15:32 Knorr
    16:03 T-Mobile (Telekom)
    17:22 Playmobil
    18:10 Braun
    -------------------------
    ABOUT ME: Hallo, Servus, and welcome to my channel! My name is Felicia (Feli), I'm 27, and I'm a German living in the USA! I was born and raised in Munich, Germany but have been living in Cincinnati, Ohio off and on since 2016. I first came here for an exchange semester during my undergrad at LMU Munich, then I returned for an internship, and then I got my master's degree in Cincinnati. I was lucky enough to win the Green Card lottery and have been a permanent resident since 2019! In my videos, I talk about cultural differences between America and Germany, things I like and dislike about living here, and other experiences that I have made during my time in the States. Let me know what YOU would like to hear about in the comments below. DANKE :)
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    -------------------------
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Комментарии • 2,5 тыс.

  • @K__a__M__I
    @K__a__M__I 3 года назад +221

    "...you can just use the Braun one that's in the bathroom."
    "but...there's only a red one?!"

    • @NormanF62
      @NormanF62 3 года назад +3

      The one marketed by Old Spice? Yes, its Braun a classic red electric shaver, their old model! The Dieter Rams influence is apparent there and he designed all of the company’s products.

    • @berndheiden7630
      @berndheiden7630 2 года назад

      @@NormanF62
      Good old „Bauhaus“ (The design school) design that has also influenced the Apple designer!
      Google Suche: Braun Vorbild für Apple. Viel Spass.

    • @PSICaptain615
      @PSICaptain615 2 года назад

      See where I grew up at we had the von Braun Civic center so I got so used to arguing with people over the pronunciation of that particular word but literally the center is named after Werner von Braun

  • @the43bullet
    @the43bullet 3 года назад +236

    Yes German beer pronunciations would be awesome. German - American here!!

    • @OurWayOfLife
      @OurWayOfLife 3 года назад +6

      I got confused when I first heard Yuengling here in the US. It sounded like Ying Ling (Chinese pronunciation) and I was like : what kinda beer? 😂
      Greetings from Virginia, Rick and Tamara

    • @HistoryNerd808
      @HistoryNerd808 3 года назад +5

      @@OurWayOfLife Yeah, that's how we pronounce it. Yuengling is an American company though not a German one, oldest in the US actually. Yuengling is an Anglicization of the founders' original last name though, who were German immigrants, so it still counts(not sure which video it would go in though)

    • @OurWayOfLife
      @OurWayOfLife 3 года назад +2

      @@HistoryNerd808 which is why it's the best beer in the US 😊👍

    • @HistoryNerd808
      @HistoryNerd808 3 года назад +3

      @@OurWayOfLife Agreed. I don't drink much, especially beer(usually it's really bitter to me) but Yuengling is a brand I do enjoy a lot. Happy that it's expanding here to Texas in the fall.

    • @OurWayOfLife
      @OurWayOfLife 3 года назад +3

      @@HistoryNerd808 yes, it was gladly one of the first beers for me to try here in the US and I stuck with it 😍👍

  • @christinajacobsson7739
    @christinajacobsson7739 5 месяцев назад +12

    I'm from Sweden and I'm so happy that i grew up watching a lot of German TV series, like Der Alte and Tatort, with subtitles, not dubbed.
    I am learing Deutsch now and that makes it so much easier.

  • @peripezie1600
    @peripezie1600 2 года назад +27

    I’m italian.... we really appreciate all german’s brands.... everything is produced in germany have an incredible quality!! 👍🏻

    • @jimreilly917
      @jimreilly917 2 месяца назад

      I say aspirin acetosalicylic acid🤣🤣

  • @krisztianforgacs1316
    @krisztianforgacs1316 3 года назад +648

    The weird thing is, people they can’t say ö, they have no problem with saying earl gray 😆

    • @georgeadams1853
      @georgeadams1853 3 года назад +24

      That's because in English, it always occurs in conjunction with a following "r".

    • @Nostrum84
      @Nostrum84 3 года назад +40

      That's not quite the same sound tho..

    • @leDespicable
      @leDespicable 3 года назад +75

      @@Nostrum84 Not quite, but almost. And you could easily just use the sound from "earl", it'd sound good enough when talking and woud be far better than just pronouncing it "o".

    • @jonadabtheunsightly
      @jonadabtheunsightly 3 года назад +3

      What's hard about "earl gray"? Those are two perfectly normal words. I mean, yes, you have to master the English liquid R phoneme, but that's a given; you're not going to get very far speaking English if you can't say R (and the various diphthongs thereof). Even if you go for a non-rhotic accent, you still have to be _able_ to pronounce R, because it still shows up in some words (just not nearly as many), and even where it's not directly pronounced it still has a noticeable impact on the pronunciation of the diphthongs, i.e., you pronounce the word as if the R were going to be there, and then just leave the R off. For example, in the infamous "Park the car on Harvard Yard" accent, /POKTHA KAAN HOVVID YODD/, is _not_ pronounced like "pack the can Havvad Yadd" would be. Even when the R is silent, the vowels still have to change to accommodate it.
      Also, non-rhotic accents are very much not recommended for a non-native speaker, unless you can convincingly pull off RP.

    • @ekaski1
      @ekaski1 3 года назад +28

      @@jonadabtheunsightly I think you misunderstood. The point wasn't about "Earl grey" but about the difficulty most English speakers have with the German ö. The German "o" is pronounced very much like the English ō (go) or short o (lot). The German ö is quite tricky. It sounds something like an English oo or ew but is made quite differently. For the ö, the tongue is placed somewhere in the middle of an English long a and long e. So, try to say "ape" and note your tongue position. Then do the same with "eagle." You should find your tongue at the bottom of your mouth for ape but at the top for eagle. Put your tongue in the middle of those positions and now say "ape" again. Now, finally round your lips like a kissy face and say "ape" again but from the new middle tongue position. That is the sound for the German ö. What makes this sound so difficult for me is that you are saying what you think is an "a" but you see an "o" and it sounds like a "u."
      If you try to say the first part of "Earl," you should notice that your mouth is formed nearly the same way.

  • @philipp0209
    @philipp0209 3 года назад +712

    who else is a native german speaker and watches this? lol

    • @alexander-10.8
      @alexander-10.8 3 года назад +36

      Who is native bavarian speaker?

    • @zeigmirjamaika8133
      @zeigmirjamaika8133 3 года назад +9

      Here.. living in Jamaica and know exactly what she talking about 🤣

    • @brankamk9077
      @brankamk9077 3 года назад +12

      I'm not native, but still fluent. And it's fun to watch

    • @ShowXTech
      @ShowXTech 3 года назад +9

      und ich weiß nicht warum...

    • @philippconstanti7965
      @philippconstanti7965 3 года назад +21

      Ich bin deutscher Muttersprachler und schau solche Videos gern an. :)

  • @PaulMcElligott
    @PaulMcElligott 2 года назад +241

    A lot of these “incorrect” American pronunciation comes from commercials created by their own American marketing divisions. In other words, we pronounce it that way because that’s how American employees of these companies told us it was pronounced.

    • @17cmmittlererminenwerfer81
      @17cmmittlererminenwerfer81 2 года назад +13

      Same problem with Hyundai.

    • @jansmejkal8088
      @jansmejkal8088 2 года назад +6

      Or Huawei... It's pronounced uauey, not hua-wai.

    • @clarykim
      @clarykim 2 года назад +8

      But now we know how is the original pronunciation...

    • @SupremeShittyCraps
      @SupremeShittyCraps 2 года назад +9

      We have the same issue with Colgate in German. In German commercials it's pronounced kɔlgɑːtə, but it's actually pronounced koʊlgeɪt.

    • @Alias_Anybody
      @Alias_Anybody 2 года назад +6

      @@jansmejkal8088
      Wua-wey

  • @toniadams945
    @toniadams945 Год назад +19

    You speak English so well, I would never have guessed you’re German. Your backstories are fascinating, I’m more captivated by the historical information than the pronunciation!

    • @twoeightythreez
      @twoeightythreez 29 дней назад

      Oh, come on
      Her English is very good, but it obviously has a German accent, which in my opinion is extremely appealing.
      Her English sounds like what one would expect an actress portraying a German to sound like in an American film.😊
      I'm not going to lie while her back stories and history are very captivating. Her voice has a lot to do with keeping my interest.
      The irony here is her accent is more pronounced in this video than it is in one a year prior to this one
      I think she realize that her accent is part of what makes her channel so appealing.

  • @stephanteuscher6583
    @stephanteuscher6583 3 года назад +426

    Wow! You did an awful lot of research about these companies. I didn't know half of it. You really deserve the thumb up for that alone.

    • @ironkormann
      @ironkormann 2 года назад +3

      Digga jeder hier in Deutschland kennt die wtf

    • @jan_777
      @jan_777 2 года назад

      It's all on Wikipedia😂

    • @jlelelr
      @jlelelr 2 года назад

      awful?

    • @stefanw07
      @stefanw07 2 года назад

      @@jlelelr an awful lot

    • @jlelelr
      @jlelelr 2 года назад

      @@stefanw07 ok

  • @thr8061
    @thr8061 3 года назад +232

    One thing to remember, Americans say product names as we do because that is how those brand names are pronounced in the commercials. So it is more of the Advertisers issue than the average person.

    • @kerlygerl
      @kerlygerl 3 года назад +12

      Yes, I came to the comments looking for this. It’s not our fault! 😂

    • @josephmartin1540
      @josephmartin1540 3 года назад +16

      Absolutely this is why we pronounce them as we do. Especially if the company has pronounced the names so on radio and TV for 60 years or more. Linguistically, usage (unfortunately or not) determines correct pronunciations...

    • @MJJones-pq3bs
      @MJJones-pq3bs 2 года назад +17

      I wanted to scream this out when K saw the headline. I remember when IKEA came to America. There were so many commercials heralding the arrival of the Swedish juggernaut, Eye-Key-uh, to suburban Philadelphia, so that is how I and the rest of the United States pronounced the store’s name. When I moved to Germany, I couldn’t wait to visit this store that had everything called Ee-Kay-uh.
      Advertisers assume Americans are too lazy or dumb to pronounce foreign names or words. Give us a chance.

    • @ameliek7686
      @ameliek7686 2 года назад +3

      That's even a thing in Germany with some foreign or even native Names. "Jever" for example, another beer brewery, is advertised with the wrong pronunciation.

    • @nixbuongiorno
      @nixbuongiorno 2 года назад +5

      The same thing happens in Germany. Brands like Michelin or Maggi lost their actual pronunciation "officially" for the german market. Maybe Germans wouldn't buy food stuff called "Matschi".

  • @kirkbolas4985
    @kirkbolas4985 2 года назад +14

    I grew up in a German-American neighborhood (many families had a rule…German at home and English away from the home) in the Midwest and by the time I was about 11, I had picked up a fair amount of the German language at the conversational level. I never took a class, but acquired a decent vocabulary of maybe 5,000 words and figured out the verb conjugations, subject-object positioning, prepositions and other grammatical elements along with pronunciation. My family moved to west coast when I was 15 and over the decades I lost what German I’d learned.
    One thing that I’ve been told by native and German fluent non-native speakers is that I seem to pronounce German words that I see written down correctly. I guess I intuitively retained something. I’m about to start a formal German language program offered by a community German Cultural center in my city, a city where where there is virtually nothing German.
    As a teen and a young man I learned Spanish and am a fluent speaker. I’m conversational in Portuguese. The two languages are close.
    The one thing I’ve learned from you is that there are similarities in some of the elements of pronunciation that Spanish and German share. I’m not sure why, but I’ve noticed the close similarities as you explain such things.
    In spite of being 58 years old now, I don’t think learning German is going to be the daunting task I’d imagined. I’ll continue to learn from you until the German center reopens in autumn. Thank you for making these videos.

  • @RDRussell2
    @RDRussell2 Год назад +10

    I just love this. I am the son of a career US Army officer, and we were stationed in Worms, Germany from 1975-1978. I got to see so much of your beautiful country, and even though I was not even 10 years old yet, Germany made a lasting impression on me. I remember it so well to this day. One thing we did as a family living in Germany is visit big cities, including Munich. (Back then, Worms was "mid-sized" let's call it, hardly a very big city.) We visited castles (of course) including "Mad" King Ludwig II's three famous castles, including Neuschwanstein. (Quick, how do you pronounce that?) We took family vacations to the Black Forest, where I learned how to ski. I remember making a trip to the Berlin Wall; little could I comprehend the wall was only a dozen years (or so) old. And of course we visited historically famous sites related to WWII, such as the Eagle's Nest. One thing I have considered as I've gotten older is just how many actual Germans I met, and what must their lives have been like? I lived in American housing, but the men responsible for maintenance of the apartment buildings were all German. There was a man who worked in the basement who all of us American kids nicknamed "Coalman." He was responsible for firing up the apartment building's heaters in the winter. (Not sure what he did in the summer!) The US kids loved to go visit him because he was willing to put up with us brats; Coalman was funny, trying to talk to us in English while we tried to talk to him in German. Whenever we didn't understand each other, we'd just start laughing. He often had some German chocolates or other treats for us sitting around. Now, you don't think about this when you are 8 years old, but how old was Coalman? Looking back, I'd place him in his 50s. (An 8 year old's mind only knows "grownup" and doesn't get the nuances of age.) What had been his life like in Germany, 30 years earlier? Was he a soldier? Was he a Nazi? Or did he work at Braun, Mercedes, or Allianz? I have no way of knowing. And the innocence of youth prevented me from even thinking to ask. He was just that friendly, coal-streaked man who sometimes had a German chocolate to share with kids from the United States. Sure, in school I learned a bit about Hitler and WWII. And we visited actual historical sites. But it was all ancient history. I didn't seem to have anything to do with my living in Germany right then and there, 1975-1978. It didn't have anything to do with Coalman, standing right in front of me trying to say something in broken English. One thing I very much appreciate about the two videos of yours that I have watched is that you don't shy away from the historical record of these companies. It is worthwhile to note this is all one timeline, and German people - working for whichever company they might be working at - were put into situations whether they agreed with them or not.

    • @liquidmidnight1
      @liquidmidnight1 7 месяцев назад +2

      Thank you for the piece of your history regarding Germany. The piece of your heart.

    • @jimreilly917
      @jimreilly917 2 месяца назад

      And often FORCED. Everything Hitler did was LEGAL because he made it so. But legal isn’t necessarily moral….and violating Nazi laws was punished harshly…to put things mildly.

  • @mr.x8259
    @mr.x8259 3 года назад +330

    Yes, make a video about German beers. My dad used to work for Siemens until they laid him off during the Great Recession.

    • @amberhiggins6327
      @amberhiggins6327 3 года назад +2

      I agree

    • @anthonyoer4778
      @anthonyoer4778 3 года назад +4

      @@amberhiggins6327 about the layoff? That's harsh.

    • @amberhiggins6327
      @amberhiggins6327 3 года назад +8

      @@anthonyoer4778 Agree to the video about German beer!

    • @niklaspetersen2487
      @niklaspetersen2487 3 года назад +5

      The video might take a little on the duration as Germany has a lot of different breweries. Warsteiner, Radeberger, Königsberger, Paulaner, Jever, etc.

    • @anthonyoer4778
      @anthonyoer4778 3 года назад +2

      @@amberhiggins6327 I know I'm just playing. German beers is an excellent idea for a video.

  • @stevenbi7495
    @stevenbi7495 3 года назад +82

    That Babbel plug is so smooth 🤣

    • @Hand-in-Shot_Productions
      @Hand-in-Shot_Productions 3 года назад +2

      Now, I am interested in it! I am currently taking Spanish using Duolingo, and am interested in taking Russian next! However, maybe I might switch to Babbel now! Thanks for the plug, Felicia!

    • @CreatorInTrng
      @CreatorInTrng 3 года назад +2

      Yep, didn't see it coming. But handled really well! It took me a minute to realize it was a sponsored piece. Feli, you're getting really good at this! Had me thinking about brushing up on Italian to enjoy the beaches and villages of Sardinia again after everything opens up.

    • @wizardpajamas6405
      @wizardpajamas6405 3 года назад +4

      Yeah that was so buttery-smooth I didn't even consider skipping it, ha.

  • @Rob-vy6zx
    @Rob-vy6zx 2 года назад +47

    As someone who has worked on international advertising for US brands I can say the common thinking from American Companies is "The only accent that we care about is $".

  • @gonace
    @gonace 3 года назад +14

    I love these videos, not only to learn the correct german pronunciations but how alike some words are pronounced equal or near equal in Swedish! Cheers from, yeah, Schweden!

    • @tommi7554
      @tommi7554 Год назад

      Not just sweden, most of those names goes pretty right in Norwegian, Finnish etc. Too.

    • @manjavanopdorp8818
      @manjavanopdorp8818 10 месяцев назад

      im dutch so

  • @charlesclarke3195
    @charlesclarke3195 3 года назад +167

    Yes. Please make the beer video. I'm British and one of my pet peeves is getting my German pronunciation corrected by bar staff, who are in fact saying it wrong.

    • @maikehudson333
      @maikehudson333 2 года назад +23

      OMG, yes.
      Ordering beer in Texas: "I'd like a Paulaner Hefeweizen, please."
      Bartender: "Do what?"
      Me: "A Paulaner Hefeweizen."
      Bartender: "Huh?"
      Me [points to tap handle]: "That one."
      Bartender: "Ohhh! You mean a Pollander Heffy Why-Zen!"

    • @StringerNews1
      @StringerNews1 2 года назад +4

      Ordering beer in German is easy, just say "Ein großes Bier bitte" and you'll usually get whatever is local. And IME that's what you should be drinking. 😏

    • @arktomorphos
      @arktomorphos 2 года назад +3

      Good luck pronunciing Hacker-Pschorr 😅

    • @sfuterfas
      @sfuterfas Год назад +3

      @@maikehudson333 yes! Bartenders and servers are always "correcting" my pronunciation of Hefeweizen. It's usually Heffer-why-zen here on the West Coast. For some reason they put an "r" in it.

    • @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648
      @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648 Год назад

      Hey, that's the price paid for successful marketing in Anglophone countries. This is why the brand isn't a niche artisan brand. If I'm in Germany or Japan or wherever and I want an American brand, I try to find out how it's said in the native language. That's consideration all over the world.

  • @auntieescreations4309
    @auntieescreations4309 3 года назад +209

    I was raised by a single father, and his parents had a huge role in my upbringing. Both of my dad's parents are from Germany. They came here in the mid 50's and bc of the war a decade before they didn't want to be judged negatively for being German, so they worked hard to lose their accents, never spoke German in the house, and didn't really talk much about their childhoods.
    Recently I discovered your channel and after watching a few of your videos I've learned so much about why my family and I do some things certain ways. It's so interesting to learn that despite my grandparents working so hard to Americanized themselves, there were so many German words and traditions that stuck. I just thought we were weird 😂 turns out we are just even more German than I realized
    I also work at Aldi in TN, and learning the proper pronunciation was such a trip!

    • @DarkMomoko
      @DarkMomoko 3 года назад +8

      Thanks for sharing your (and your families) story!

    • @kaleidoscopeschannel1650
      @kaleidoscopeschannel1650 3 года назад +1

      ruclips.net/video/IzbrztZFCFA/видео.html

    • @PSICaptain615
      @PSICaptain615 3 года назад +2

      I live like two blocks from an Aldi in Madison Tennessee

    • @auntieescreations4309
      @auntieescreations4309 3 года назад +2

      @@PSICaptain615 awesome! I work at one in Memphis!

    • @Slips0ul
      @Slips0ul 2 года назад +5

      This pretty sums up my same experience with my Grandparents.

  • @sunnyvsgod1
    @sunnyvsgod1 2 года назад

    Ich schaue deine Videos erst seit kurzem.. aber ich bin begeistert wie du, wie hier in diesem Video, so viele Hintergrundinformationen mit einbringst und diese auch so frei vorträgst. Danke für diese Mühe😊

  • @Baya86
    @Baya86 2 года назад +1

    So geil, wie du erst minutenlang - in my opinion - perfekt englisch redest und dann "Jo Servus, hob ghört du ärbesst bei Siemens?" Daumen hoch und a Grüßla aus Oberfranken :)

  • @toddwebb7521
    @toddwebb7521 3 года назад +67

    I tend to pronounce stuff correct when speaking German but pronounce it more like other English speakers when speaking English because I don't want people looking at me like I have an arm growing out of my forehead.

    • @dutchgamer842
      @dutchgamer842 3 года назад +8

      It would sound kinda off, to pronounce words in the native language in another language, that wouldn't fit the language

    • @ven7ce510
      @ven7ce510 3 года назад +2

      Same here

    • @lybri5490
      @lybri5490 3 года назад +4

      I know what you mean but for me its mostly the fear that I'm going to come off like a pretentious know it all since I'm not a native German😂

    • @billcoleman4258
      @billcoleman4258 3 года назад +2

      I speak a little Hebrew and I cannot bring myself to use Hebrew pronunciation for English names and places, which basically sound like caricatures of the original English.

    • @toddwebb7521
      @toddwebb7521 3 года назад +2

      And this doesn't just apply to German it also applies to the other languages I know.
      I don't use Latin pronunciations of Latin loan words in English even though I know Latin.
      I also don't use really Spanish pronunciations while speaking English (mostly Mexican food items in that case)
      Haven't really ran into a case of Vietnamese words in an English conversation yet.

  • @Waechter_im_All
    @Waechter_im_All 3 года назад +28

    Ich staune jedesmal, dass Du nicht selber durcheinanderkommst, wenn Du fünfmal im Satz die Sprache wechselst. 😄

  • @rjdrakon2492
    @rjdrakon2492 3 года назад +1

    You sound absutley brilliant in this one. Awesomely thought out, pronounced, and delivered. Yet, thoroughly entertaining.

  • @maryreid4273
    @maryreid4273 Год назад +8

    It makes me happy, after just over a year learning German, that I can make a good attempt at guessing how these might sound in German, and having a try at saying them. German is so cool!

  • @bobrowlette4143
    @bobrowlette4143 3 года назад +77

    Feli, my grandmother from Austria was a constant source of amusement to my parents when she tried to pronounce many American words. Today I remember those things as quite endearing. Also... Although my German is actually not so good, my experience is many native German speakers are delighted when I have attempted to speak their language.

    • @PhilG999
      @PhilG999 3 года назад +7

      I get the same reaction! I am told my family name is Austrian. I also spent 8 years working for Deutz here in the USA which is a division of KHD in Cologne. Traced back to the inventors of the Diesel engine Rudolph Diesel and Nicholas August Otto! My "Deutche Sprech" is "nicht gut" either because the Germans that worked here, and the ones that visited from Germany, insisted on speaking English! I do speak a little. Poorly... ;)

    • @gustavmeyrink_2.0
      @gustavmeyrink_2.0 3 года назад +1

      @@PhilG999 true that Rudolph Diesel invented the Diesel engine but Nicholaus Otto invented the modern 4 stroke petrol (gas if you are of American persuasion) motor.

    • @PhilG999
      @PhilG999 3 года назад +2

      @@gustavmeyrink_2.0 Hence the Otto cycle in thermodynamics. Yes. I am American and an Engineer by profession. And BTW a minor quibble but Diesel and gas are Engines not Motors... ;)

    • @sharonhammond4934
      @sharonhammond4934 8 месяцев назад +1

      Anyone in Germany know the pronunciation of my last name, rietz

  • @markwolkotte5253
    @markwolkotte5253 3 года назад +54

    I have German and Dutch ancestry, and I have to admit. I love how you pronounce these. Especially Aldi

  • @module79l28
    @module79l28 2 года назад +10

    Fun Fact: here in Portugal we used to call the germans "boches". That word derived directly from the Bosch brand, which was associated with Germany, and made its way into our language from a famous comic book series about WWII. : )

    • @YTDono
      @YTDono 2 года назад +1

      I am French-speaking Belgian and we also use Boches but it comes from the old French "alboches" (stubborn). I wonder if this word was not brought to Portugal by the soldiers of the Portuguese expeditionary force present in France during ww1

    • @korssar
      @korssar 2 года назад +1

      in Mexico the VW beetle and sometimes the facility or the whole VW co. is called "vocho", very close to "boches", i.e. short for volks (folks)
      This article argues the same as @3SGE
      m.atraccion360.com/origen-del-nombre-del-vocho/amp

    • @sandraankenbrand
      @sandraankenbrand 11 месяцев назад

      ​@3SGE that's a good one... Love that. Never heard it during my studies in Paris though

  • @nasiriyah110
    @nasiriyah110 2 года назад +6

    Thank you for clearing up Siemens! I work for the medical side of the corporation in the US, where it’s pronounced with an “s.” We get Germans from corporate who pronounce it both ways and it confused the heck out of me. Thanks for the explanation!!

  • @ericcramer5979
    @ericcramer5979 3 года назад +65

    Please do the all-beer video you discussed making. I’ll soon be living in Germany and would find that very valuable

    • @BaluDerBaer933
      @BaluDerBaer933 3 года назад +2

      Then: Herr Cramer!

    • @madrooky1398
      @madrooky1398 3 года назад +1

      @@BaluDerBaer933 Why not germanize him properly? Herr Krämer XD
      Its probably wrong but is sounds very similar.

    • @dariuswhitefang2993
      @dariuswhitefang2993 3 года назад

      yep, it would be "Krämer" :)

    • @BaluDerBaer933
      @BaluDerBaer933 3 года назад +1

      @@dariuswhitefang2993 Bullshit, Kramer / Cramer exists much often!

    • @dariuswhitefang2993
      @dariuswhitefang2993 3 года назад

      @@BaluDerBaer933 i didn't said that ....

  • @ryanworkman3032
    @ryanworkman3032 3 года назад +33

    I've noticed the biggest pronunciation difference between German and english is we both put emphasis on different syllables

    • @californiahiker9616
      @californiahiker9616 3 года назад +3

      That’s what I love about French. All syllables pretty much have equal emphasis!

    • @Hand-in-Shot_Productions
      @Hand-in-Shot_Productions 3 года назад +1

      I could see that, since that makes the difference between "Lidl" and "Little", or "Adidas" and "Uh-dee-dus"! Maybe second place goes to the umlauts, like "Bräun" and "Brown"!

    • @ryanworkman3032
      @ryanworkman3032 3 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/fbjE8KI-j3M/видео.html

    • @hihp
      @hihp 3 года назад +1

      Never look into Swiss German, then :D

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin 3 года назад

      I am glad we have always accent on first syllable in all words in Czech. English or even Russian are total mess for me, you have to just remember all words and how it's pronounced. :-D :-D

  • @michaelpaul6664
    @michaelpaul6664 Год назад +1

    Feli, du hast dir echt Mühe gegeben. Respekt!

  • @gelinecamillecruz8936
    @gelinecamillecruz8936 2 года назад +1

    I love your videos. You have additional information rather than just pronunciation correction.

  • @brianostube
    @brianostube 3 года назад +21

    I remember Löwenbräu ran television ads here in the US in the late 1970s with the slogan "Let it be Löwenbräu" (pronounced low-en-brow), adapting it to American pronunciation. My Dad travelled to West Germany on business in 1979 & brought the proper German pronunciation home with him :-)

    • @melindar.fischer5106
      @melindar.fischer5106 3 года назад

      🎶"Here's to good friends, tonight is kinda special..."🎵

    • @brianostube
      @brianostube 3 года назад +2

      Nice - I don't remember the rest of the jingle! But I do remember my hometown Baltimore Orioles sportscasters sometimes co-opting the slogan whenever outfielder John Lowenstein made a key play: "Tonight, let it be Lowenstein"!! :-)

    • @melindar.fischer5106
      @melindar.fischer5106 3 года назад +1

      @@brianostube 😂. You can find many versions of the TV commercial on RUclips or just Google it.

    • @anthonykaiser974
      @anthonykaiser974 3 года назад

      Same memory here. I was too young to even really understand that it was a German brand, or really what that exactly meant.

    • @maikehudson333
      @maikehudson333 2 года назад +1

      I wish people would just say "lion brew" if they can't pronounce the German word.

  • @renafielding945
    @renafielding945 3 года назад +8

    I learned German from an old nun from Fredericksburg Texas who only spoke Texas German at home. I got lucky and was able to translate for a large group touring Europe with that excellent skill. Thank you Sister Anysia ❤️❤️❤️

    • @philipp1660
      @philipp1660 2 года назад

      Touring europe. How habe you been able to translate every other language despite german with your german skills. This is what gets me every time, that americans say they went to europe like it is only one country. Gosh when you go to paris it is not the capital of europe and not every country is the same as germany. So next time you talk about a visit to europe, mention the country, because there is a differmece between f.e. spain and bulgaria. But i think this does not fit in your gun filled patriotic heads

    • @popenieafantome9527
      @popenieafantome9527 2 года назад

      @@philipp1660 if someone says Europe, i just assume they went to several countries and are just lazy to say which countries. Distance an american is willing to travel is pretty far. Hour drive is pretty common. Had teacher travel 4 hours from home to school daily. Met plenty of people who within the same state, travel over 6 hours to visit family on whim. Given that some of our states are size of European countries, visiting several countries seem plausible.

  • @nwetyinwin3788
    @nwetyinwin3788 2 года назад

    Very informative! Thanks !

  • @stephenplatt5048
    @stephenplatt5048 Год назад +5

    Hi Feli!
    One german brand that I believe is slightly mispronounced is Stihl. Most people pronounce it like "steel" but I believe it's correctly pronounced "shteel". The company, founded in 1926 by Andreas Stihl at Waiblingen (then called Neustadt), Baden-Wurtenburg, the manufacturer of chain saws as well as other lawn & garden power tools has built these items in my hometown, Virginia Beach VA since 1974 for the North America market. Employing about 2,000 people, it's one of the largest civilian employers in the city. Stihl occupies about 2 million square feet of manufacturing and office space here.

  • @user-qb1gz7fi2q
    @user-qb1gz7fi2q 3 года назад +8

    Quite helpful. I'm that one who used to pronounce every single name wrong when I first came to Germany. Nobody corrected me through.Thank you ☺️.

    • @Neoyorchese
      @Neoyorchese 3 месяца назад

      People are polite normally 😊

  • @cjmartin5928
    @cjmartin5928 3 года назад +36

    Will never forget Knorr... there used to be a commercial in England when I was a teenager. I’ll never forget it... “Kk-norr, we’ve got the kk-now how!!! Lol

    • @travelintammy6073
      @travelintammy6073 3 года назад +4

      Funny thing is recent commercials pronounce it "nour"

    • @DocMoonlight
      @DocMoonlight 3 года назад +1

      In the US in the sixties, there was a commercial that said, "Europe say Kn-oor, here we say 'Knor'".

    • @EK-gr9gd
      @EK-gr9gd 2 года назад

      Today its a brand of Unilever.

    • @MartinBrenner
      @MartinBrenner 2 года назад +2

      There is another Knorr company, Knorr-Bremse which produces braking systems for cars and railways (Bremse = Brake), actually the U.S. branch is called KBC (Knorr Brake Company)

    • @sirdigalot1978
      @sirdigalot1978 2 года назад

      I remember those commercials! It didnt click until this comment 25 years later!

  • @afpwebworks
    @afpwebworks 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for such an interesting and informative video. About 25 years ago I had an export job in Australia which meant I had to travel frequently to Europe. At the time I thought I should learn one of the languages I was likely to encounter in this job but I never got around to it. After seeing this video, I'm glad I didn't, because it's pretty clear there are many sounds in German that are not found in English. The R for example requires not just different emphasis but completely different muscle actions in the mouth. And the L sound as well. I KNOW it would have taken me YEARS to master those different sounds. As it turned out, all the Europeans I encountered were so well educated in English that I didnt need any other language to make myself understood anyway. Thank you. And thank you for your charming smile.

  • @Abbelboxe
    @Abbelboxe 3 года назад

    Propably the best and most natural plug for a sponsor ever.

  • @marcus813
    @marcus813 3 года назад +21

    I would love for you to go more in-depth about German beer brands. You would do such a great job educating us about them and how they're pronounced in German.

    • @michaelarentsen1328
      @michaelarentsen1328 3 года назад +5

      Man, that could be funny because there are so many here in germany that, if you start with it you could fill a 24 hour stream with them and won't have the half of the brand namens 😆

    • @gustavmeyrink_2.0
      @gustavmeyrink_2.0 3 года назад +2

      In Germany there are roughly 1300 breweries producing over 5000 brands of beer.
      In depth is not going to happen in a YT video but a little bit of surface scratching is possible.

    • @marcus813
      @marcus813 3 года назад

      @@gustavmeyrink_2.0 Even something that scratched the surface would have enough content for a RUclips video. I would certainly watch it!

  • @karlsmith2570
    @karlsmith2570 3 года назад +28

    Yes, I'd personally love to see a video about the different German beers and their correct pronunciations

    • @karinbirkenbihl2053
      @karinbirkenbihl2053 3 года назад +1

      I'm looking forward to Lasser-Bräu from Lörrach...🤓

  • @jbowerdel
    @jbowerdel 2 года назад

    very interesting and well done video-thanks!! by the way i love when you say words and phrases in your native german-love listening to pick out words that are similar or known.

  • @ozandemiroz
    @ozandemiroz 2 года назад

    Vielen Dank, tolles video!

  • @daviddill5227
    @daviddill5227 3 года назад +14

    More pronunciations is much appreciated. I love the talking about brands in Germany. Your content is really well done Felicia. I love your channels!

  • @razz5904
    @razz5904 3 года назад +5

    Thank you for this video. I’ve been arguing with my friends on how to pronounce LIDL and nobody believed me as it should be ‚‘ liedl‘‘ not ‚‘ lidl‘‘
    But I’m so happy that i was pronouncing it right all those years

  • @wtm1
    @wtm1 Год назад

    Always learning something on your videos

  • @MicaG1303
    @MicaG1303 2 года назад +2

    I like your content! It's interesting that some of the German brands and how you say them is almost exactly to how we say them in Spanish!

  • @dummerikan
    @dummerikan 3 года назад +21

    Maybe you could talk about how when they marketed Tofifee in the US they changed the spelling to Toffifay. Or how Vick's Vapo-rub is marketed as Wick in Germany because Vick's would sound very inappropriate.

    • @dutchgamer842
      @dutchgamer842 3 года назад +3

      I did not know they rebranded Vicks in Germany

    • @BaluDerBaer933
      @BaluDerBaer933 3 года назад +1

      Fick! Wobei inzwischen auch keiner mehr Fox sagen würde, sondern jeder das amerikanisierte Vox wenn es um den TV-Sender geht! ;-)

    • @dummerikan
      @dummerikan 3 года назад +2

      @@BaluDerBaer933 Genau. Man könnte sich aber einen voll peinlichen Aussprachefehler von einem Kind in der Apotheke vorstellen. 🤣

    • @sphhyn
      @sphhyn 3 года назад +1

      Haha 😆 I never noticed that about Vick / Wick. But it’s obvious. You wouldn’t call a company Vick here 😳

  • @skallagrimr_kveldulfsson
    @skallagrimr_kveldulfsson 3 года назад +16

    You have a great talent in explaining these things and your presentation is very positive and entertaining. Great channel.

  • @zachwallick5140
    @zachwallick5140 2 года назад +8

    Went to Munchin with my wife for our honeymoon. Wish I had learned some German before going. Luckily most Germans under around 35 spoke some English. We went to a Bayern game (favorite sports team and I'm American) and saw Robert Lewandowski score his 5 goals in 9 minutes.

  • @tamu7243
    @tamu7243 2 года назад +6

    Glad to know we're pronouncing everything correctly in Norway 😝

  • @NeverMetTheGuy
    @NeverMetTheGuy 3 года назад +29

    So apparently having a Lidl and an Aldi about three miles from each other on my area is a mathematically big deal! Whoa!

    • @tommc4916
      @tommc4916 2 года назад +1

      Same here. But I prefer Lidl for the freshly-baked items in the store. :)

    • @abalada
      @abalada 2 года назад +3

      Only in the USA. In Germany they are often just 30 - 300 m apart.

  • @davidcoleman4800
    @davidcoleman4800 3 года назад +10

    When I was an Art Director in New York we had Knorr as a client in the early 90's. They had pronounced it the American way for years but then thought they wanted to pronounce it the correct way. In the meeting about the change, everyone tried to tell them that it would wound silly to Americans. But I said: "How would you feel if everyone said ' we are not going to say your name the right way because that sounds dumb?' " The advertising was changed to the correct pronunciation.

    • @petereggers7603
      @petereggers7603 3 года назад +2

      Great story, thanks. Would be the same thing if Colgate will try to turn time backwards, pronouncing its name the correct american way in Europe/Germany

  • @Lilhaer
    @Lilhaer 3 года назад +1

    Yes please, an episode on breweries and their history and pronunciation would be nice! Thanks for this video we enjoyed it.

  • @danielleowusu5162
    @danielleowusu5162 2 года назад +1

    There is a lidl being built in my neighborhood. I'm excited. Thank you for the correct pronunciation!

  • @Martina-rg4me
    @Martina-rg4me 3 года назад +5

    Feli you’re amazing! I enjoy & have fun with this series 😄 The amount of research that you put into this videos is incredible! ❣️

  • @kenstrampe7609
    @kenstrampe7609 3 года назад +8

    I like these kind of videos where you give the proper pronunciation and a little history lesson too. Yes i would like one on all the beers too.

  • @OneDollaBill88
    @OneDollaBill88 2 года назад +1

    Hey, deine Videos sind toll ... du bist unglaublich sympathisch! :) wünsch dir weiterhin viel Erfolg! Liebe Grüße aus Bayern ^^

  • @techanswerguy8820
    @techanswerguy8820 Год назад

    For someone who's been here for such a sort time your English is AMAZING.

  • @mimimonster
    @mimimonster 3 года назад +58

    Yes German beer pronunciation video!!

    • @themilestonecollection6769
      @themilestonecollection6769 3 года назад

      uuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh

  • @MarkWandRobBobPresent
    @MarkWandRobBobPresent 3 года назад +6

    The lesson on Kn- (regarding Knorr) reminds me of the prolific German board game designer Reiner Knizia. His name gets seriously butchered by people here in the US, who often pronounce it something like nihz-EE-uh. 😅 (To anyone wondering, it's pronounced something like Cuh-NEETZ-ee-uh, although the "Cuh" part isn't really a separate syllable with its own vowel...)

  • @pbennett13
    @pbennett13 10 месяцев назад

    very enjoyable content… have watched several over last few days

  • @theragingplatypus4743
    @theragingplatypus4743 2 года назад +1

    Babble is an English word going back thousands of years to the Tower of Babel. It has taken various forms in virtually every language on earth. Of course we are going to pronounce it the way we pronounce it.

  • @KyleDagg
    @KyleDagg 3 года назад +50

    I'm pretty sure the name "Babbel" comes from the biblical tower of Babel. which is why it would make sense that it's so similar in so many languages and means something similar

    • @Ilyena
      @Ilyena 3 года назад +1

      I'm pretty sure it does _not._

    • @arschlochmcgurk4409
      @arschlochmcgurk4409 3 года назад +6

      But it would make sense, god punished the people for the idea to build a tower to reach him, all the people speaks now in different languages and no one understands the other one.

    • @connatser89
      @connatser89 2 года назад +1

      In Germany, the Word Babbeln is slang and means somethimg like talking.
      So no, its not from the Tower of Babel🤣

    • @HarmonicWave
      @HarmonicWave 2 года назад +7

      Yes, "babbel" comes from the tower of babel, which is also where the kingdom of Babylon got its name. Look up the word for Saturday in other languages as well and most of them will sound similar to the biblical word "Sabbath" for the 7th day.

    • @HarmonicWave
      @HarmonicWave 2 года назад +6

      @@connatser89 Your statement actually fits with it coming from the tower of babel because it means talking, as in language, as in confused languages after the tower of babel.

  • @troy78
    @troy78 3 года назад +11

    The beer episode would be cool, but a Bundesliga video would be even cooler! You touched on Bayer Leverkusen and FC Bayern Munich here a bit, but a video going over team and stadium pronunciation would be amazing. Maybe a little team history thrown in.
    🍻⚽️🍻

  • @traktoros
    @traktoros 2 года назад +1

    Siemens&Halske also made railway signalling equipments and their stuff has been manufactured in other countries under license. Here in Hungary there is a lot of stations where these equipment has been installed and still working today! We refer to them as "SH" (pronounced somewhat like "esha").
    Oh, and one up for the episode about beers 😊

  • @ryfreedman
    @ryfreedman 2 года назад

    I’m enjoying these!

  • @ronirelund2647
    @ronirelund2647 3 года назад +7

    Yes, I would very much love to see a video on German beer pronunciations and some of the history behind them...Thanks!!

  • @fabiantheliker44
    @fabiantheliker44 3 года назад +5

    Könntest du mal ein Video machen über die verschiedene Kulturen in Deutschland. Hab das Gefühl die Leute in Amerika denken wir sind alle wie die Menschen in Bayern. Oktoberfest etc. Find es übrigens super wie du die deutsche Sprache nach Amerika bringst. Mach weiter so.
    Übrigens wenn das Biervideo kommt nimm bitte Becks mit rein.
    Liebe Grüße aus Bremen 🇩🇪

    • @peterreimerMannaufderBank
      @peterreimerMannaufderBank Год назад

      Den Eindruck habe ich auch - das betrifft für mich als Musiker z.B. auch die Vorstellung davon, wie deutsche Volksmusik klingt. Aber wie soll es ein Amerikaner wissen, wenn nicht mal mehr Deutsche ihre eigene Volksmusik kennen?

    • @robfriedrich2822
      @robfriedrich2822 Год назад

      Die typischste deutsche Musik ist - aus Slowenien....

    • @robfriedrich2822
      @robfriedrich2822 Год назад

      Beim Bratwurstfest hört man tschechische Polka.

  • @JesperJorgensenn
    @JesperJorgensenn 2 года назад +19

    You can really tell here that Denmark and Germany are neighbors, we pronounce everything in German 😅 and I can tell you the way you pronounced LEGO is 100% correct 😁

  • @xirensixseo
    @xirensixseo 2 года назад +4

    i remember doing a project sponsored by Siemens, we had to use their industrial grade gateways, the uh, electronics kind, it was pretty interesting, using zigbee and stuff to connect to it, but i think everyone here questioned whether we were saying it right, especially being in Asia

  • @Tman1776
    @Tman1776 3 года назад +9

    I'd love to see more on the different beers and how they're pronounced

  • @nikitoth1856
    @nikitoth1856 3 года назад +6

    This was really interesting for me as a Hungarian currently living in the UK. Even though it is not brand related, when I started learning German I realised how many borrowed words are there in Hungarian from German. The most interesting for me to this day is the English word car key, that we call slusszkulcs in Hungarian, kulcs meaning key, so basically we kind of say keykey, with the first part coming from the german word Schlüssel (key) (with a slight difference, the word is shortened). They are many other words that either have just a more Hungarian pronunciation or spelling, but definitely have a German background. We also pronounce German brands more similarly to the German way than English.

    • @Hendricus56
      @Hendricus56 3 года назад

      I'm not so extremely surprised about that. Austro-Hungarian Empire aka 100 years ago is enough to understand why it probably is like that

  • @meaninthemirror
    @meaninthemirror 2 года назад

    Your English pronounce is excellent and your voice is crystal clear. A TV channel must hire you..seriously!

  • @ConceptJunkie
    @ConceptJunkie Год назад

    My great-grandparents came to the U.S. about 100 years ago from Austria, so I've always been fascinated with the German language and culture, since 3 of my 4 grandparents are Pennsylvania Dutch. Unfortunately, German was not available to me in high school, so I ended up taking 2 years of Spanish and a year of French. My wife studied some German in college. I'm really excited to discover your channel. Your presentation is light and fun, but you do a great job of being very precise and detailed. Keep up the great work!

  • @clue1812
    @clue1812 3 года назад +5

    Great video! Like the history about the German brands too. Definitely would be good to see video on the different beer breweries with some history.

  • @jpisaac85
    @jpisaac85 3 года назад +10

    Feli! Big YES to the beer episode. I've been to Munich twice and would love to know the correct pronunciation for Hofbräuhaus :)

    • @AndrewAMartin
      @AndrewAMartin 3 года назад

      Something like Hoe-f-broy-howz -- Hof rhymes with loaf, braeu rhymes with boy, haus like house with a z, or like 'how's that TPS report coming?'

  • @kennethwilson1142
    @kennethwilson1142 Год назад

    Lived near Wurzburg from 87 to 90. It was an amazing time - I did not want to leave. Munich is my favorite city!
    Great video! Auf Wiedersehen! Tschuss!

  • @idiorzanoni2418
    @idiorzanoni2418 3 года назад

    You are lovely! Great videos!! Danke!

  • @sluttymctits4496
    @sluttymctits4496 3 года назад +11

    Yes, please make a video about German beer pronunciations! Ever since I saw your Oktoberfest video (how I discovered you), I've been obsessed with German beers and always feel like I'm butchering the names. I think I've got the general pronunciations down, but I know I screw up where the emphasis falls.

  • @wizardpajamas6405
    @wizardpajamas6405 3 года назад +13

    Big "Ja" to the German beer video idea! I've been learning Deutsch and recently discovered I'd been pronouncing Späten wrong for years. Oops. My favorites though are Weihenstaphaner, Hofbräu, Paulaner, and Ayinger so I'd like to make sure I'm saying those correctly!

    • @gameon2000
      @gameon2000 3 года назад

      SPATEN = Shpuhtan, WEIHENSTEPHAN = Veyeanshtaphuhn, HOFBRÄU = Hofbroy, PAULANER = Puhooluhna, AYINGER = EYEEENGAR

    • @letsplayhasi5396
      @letsplayhasi5396 2 года назад +1

      So basically you are all in for Bavarian beers and then there’s hofbräu? Wtf

    • @Mr.FredYT
      @Mr.FredYT Год назад +1

      Germanys Favorit Beer is Veltins and Krombacher

  • @keithliermann692
    @keithliermann692 11 месяцев назад

    Love your show!!

  • @ban-0ne77
    @ban-0ne77 Год назад +3

    Watching your videos have made me realize just how german my ancestry is. I know my family is mostly from there or that region of europe. And I have definitely noticed from watching your videos that I can relate very well to german characteristics. It's crazy how our natural instincts reflect the part of the world we are from or descendants from. I really in joy your content thank you.

  • @folkehoffmann1198
    @folkehoffmann1198 3 года назад +24

    You just made me think of the way I heard my American host mother pronounce ibuprofen.

    • @chitlitlah
      @chitlitlah 3 года назад +6

      On the subject of drugs, what do Germans call acetaminophen (the stuff usually in Tylenol)? I know the Brits call it paracetamol.

    • @folkehoffmann1198
      @folkehoffmann1198 3 года назад +4

      @@chitlitlah Well we write it the same way as the Brits but we pronounce it differently. I dont know how to explain how we pronounce it though.

    • @berlindude75
      @berlindude75 3 года назад +8

      German pronunciation (in English approximation):
      Ibuprofen = EE-BOO-PRO-FHEYN
      Paracetamol = PA-RHA-TSAY-TA-MHOL

    • @folkehoffmann1198
      @folkehoffmann1198 3 года назад +3

      @@berlindude75 That's actually pretty good. But I have an addition: Pronounce every A like the last A in California except for the A in the TSAY part.

    • @dutchgamer842
      @dutchgamer842 3 года назад +5

      @@chitlitlah paracetamol is the general name in most of Europe, Britain is still part of Europe, lots of people mix up EU and Europe.

  • @Stefan23E
    @Stefan23E 3 года назад +10

    A video about german brewerys and beer types would be awesome!! Specially about the history.

  • @sarahpeach120
    @sarahpeach120 2 года назад +2

    I always love how she talks ☺

  • @jennypangilinan6820
    @jennypangilinan6820 2 года назад

    Nice.I am leaving here in Germany since 2003 and this video is very informative.❤

  • @brandonmorgan9338
    @brandonmorgan9338 3 года назад +4

    I was one of the first employees that Lidl hired here in the US back in April 2017. The company officially opened their first store on June 15, 2017. My store didn’t open until July 27, 2017.

  • @katewalchle6704
    @katewalchle6704 3 года назад +15

    When I moved to Germany from the US at age 12 (German step-dad), I was so stumped when I kid at the store asked for a pack of "Hooba Booba" .... it's was the bubble gum, Hubba Bubba!

    • @twosunies
      @twosunies 2 года назад +3

      everyone pronouces it like hubba bubba

    • @twosunies
      @twosunies 2 года назад

      @@thenightporterbut that's not how you pronounce it and I live and was born in Germany too

  • @margui6224
    @margui6224 Год назад +1

    Thank you! Danke!

  • @Loukie69
    @Loukie69 2 года назад +1

    Ha! Felicia, I actually had to do a double take while you were tentatively pronouncing Braun the way Americans/English people generally would. When you said 'Broan (rhyme with 'o' in 'Lord') I was shocked. You absolutely nailed the English speaking South African accent (something very difficult to do properly).

  • @99sheepy
    @99sheepy 3 года назад +5

    Yes, a video about German beer types/brands would be great.

  • @brendanfocht5733
    @brendanfocht5733 3 года назад +3

    I love your channel. Please do a video about beer pronunciation, I would like to know how to pronounce Aecht Schlenkerla.

  • @fakefootball8407
    @fakefootball8407 5 месяцев назад

    You mentioned Zirndorf . I went there a few times when I was stationed at Furth. They have a Zirndorfer beer which we enjoyed. Really miss my my Army days in West Germany.

  • @Angelfeather100
    @Angelfeather100 2 года назад

    Spot on, very welcome video, gently educating people! Other German mispronounced names are Miele, Diesel (in France they pronounce the "e" also!) and Loewe (the Spanish fashion brand who took its name from its member, the German craftsman Enrique Loewe y Roessberg).

  • @europeantechnic
    @europeantechnic 3 года назад +3

    Very interesting Feli. I had no idea Knorr was German.
    Regarding the pronunciation of Lidl, even the company's own adverts in the UK pronounce it incorrectly. The pronounce it like "Liddle" and the slogan is "Big on quality, Lidl on price" (using "liddle" as if "little")
    Would certainly be interested in a video dedicated to brands of beer, particularly how to pronounce
    Franziskaner and whether 'weissbier' means 'white beer' or 'wheat beer'!

  • @pierrecharpentier1224
    @pierrecharpentier1224 3 года назад +17

    Wow, there are so many brands that we in France pronounce so similarly like Adidas, Lidl and Aldi although we rather say Adee-DAS, Lee-DELL and Al-DEE.
    But sometimes we're quite 'French' by saying 'Leuouenne-Breuille' instead of 'Loewenbraeu' 😂😂
    Excellent English Felicia, I wouldn't have guessed you were German.

    • @OurWayOfLife
      @OurWayOfLife 3 года назад +1

      Diabeedus is one of these words, too 😂👍
      Greetings from 2 Germans from Virginia, Rick and Tamara

    • @FabiWe91
      @FabiWe91 3 года назад +3

      Leuouenne-Breuille - made my day!

    • @pierrecharpentier1224
      @pierrecharpentier1224 3 года назад +2

      @@FabiWe91 This is actually how we pronounce it. Heard it from old people in a Marseille pub ordering it and I first didn't realize what it is or means til I got it then.
      Another classic is "sacchertorte" (don't know if I wrote it correctly), we say "saguère-torteuh" (yeah unfortunately we only speak French and nothing else)
      Once I ordered it in Vienna nobody understood me 😂😂

    • @FabiWe91
      @FabiWe91 3 года назад +1

      @@pierrecharpentier1224 It's fenomenal and it actually sounds fancier than the correct German pronunciation ;) When we Germans try to say French words, we butcher them horribly sometimes, like "Louis Witong", "Shantall-e" (Chantalle) and "Bombong" (bonbon).

    • @karinbirkenbihl2053
      @karinbirkenbihl2053 3 года назад

      Some 30 or 40 years ago there was an Allianz ad in TV playing in France and the French flic said: "offentlisch Alliãnce versischert.." 😏

  • @1920sman
    @1920sman Год назад +2

    Never heard adidas pronounced adeedas - here in New Zealand we use the German pronunciation.
    Never heard of Aldi, Lidl, Knorr as we don’t have them here.
    Your comments about Bosch and mobile pronunciation illustrate the difference between American pronunciation and other English accents such we have here in NZ

  • @rafaelgcpp
    @rafaelgcpp 2 года назад +2

    Altough not a native English speaker, I'd love to hear about the beer brands! It is so hard to find some information on how to pronounce German brands, but they are really popular in Brazil. BTW, Playmobil brought me great memories of my child toys!