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German. Pronunciation

Discussion in 'General Homebrew Discussion' started by OswaldvW, Mar 31, 2014.

 

  1. #81
    Hopinista

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 3, 2014
    Don't lie ;)
     
  2. #82
    cooldood

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 3, 2014
    Well following this line of thinking all cars and their parts should have German names since Mercedes invented the car.
    All fireworks and firearms should have Chinese names.
    and maple syrup should have Canuck names

    :D
     
  3. #83
    tootal

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 3, 2014
    In 1980 there was no "craft" beer in 99% of the bars. Especially in the middle of Kansas! There was a brewery in Lawrence, which is really good, but we weren't there. In most bars a Michelob was the closest beer to a craft that you could get. It was advertised, in the day, as the beer for connoisseurs! Boy how things have changed! :tank:
     
  4. #84
    skw

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 3, 2014
    The same goes for German. Where others say vey-tsen, I say woy-tsuh (both written Weizen).
     
  5. #85
    Qhrumphf

    Stay Rude, Stay Rebel, Stay SHARP  

    Posted Apr 3, 2014
    Factor in some of the non-German German, and it gets crazy. I listened to something in Zürichdeutsch, and it didn't sound even remotely alike.
     
  6. #86
    EoinMag

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 3, 2014

    Naja ob du wirklich Deutsch sprichst
    ;-)
     
  7. #87
    Keith_O

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 3, 2014
    Ask a German speaker in the hill country of Texas.
    They speak a distinct dialect, My ex-wife swore that my Dad didn't speak German. I said well, then he's been cussing me in Klingon for 25 years then...
     
    hunter_la5 likes this.
  8. #88
    alane1

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 3, 2014
    If you get into Sud Tirol and Romansh Ladin they sound nothing like Hochdeutsch
     
  9. #89
    nhindian

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 3, 2014
    If you go pretty much anywhere in Germany it sounds nothing like Hochdeutsch since almost noone speaks Hochdeutsch
     
  10. #90
    alane1

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 4, 2014
    Hochdeutsch = standard German, or is what I learned in schule falsch?
     
  11. #91
    MaxStout

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Apr 4, 2014
    They learn it in school, but many Germans revert to their local dialects, some of which can be difficult to follow. Go to Köln and try to decipher the Kölsch dialect.
     
  12. #92
    FatDragon

    Not actually a dragon.  

    Posted Apr 4, 2014
    In my experience, in addition to being delicious *cymbal clash*, Hamburgers speak the most standard German I've heard from native speakers.
     
  13. #93
    Qhrumphf

    Stay Rude, Stay Rebel, Stay SHARP  

    Posted Apr 4, 2014
    *insert something here about FC St. Pauli* I think I know where I'm moving...
     
  14. #94
    OswaldvW

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 4, 2014
    In medicine, we use Latin and Greek terms. In music, particularly for those who study Baroque and Classical music, most terms are in Italian. The Italians did not invent music. Even to this day, we use tons of Italian terms in music. Some things just become tradition and we learn not only the words, but their original meanings. I am certainly not advocating using German words or not using German words. My original post just advocates learning the correct pronunciation. People can make up their minds if they want to use German brew words or not, and even if they want to pronounce these brewing words correctly or not.
     
  15. #95
    EoinMag

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 4, 2014
    Moin moin, ich lauve dat du nie platt gehört hast mijn jong ? Nordisch by nature.
    :-D

    Bremen is accepted generally as the seat of high German, this is however debated hotly amongst Germans. I've never heard Hamburg mentioned but it's not too far from Bremen.
     
  16. #96
    skw

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 4, 2014
    Standard German is an artificial construct as a compromise of all the German dialects: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_German#Origins

    It's standard everywhere, but it's the native tongue of nowhere.
     
  17. #97
    FatDragon

    Not actually a dragon.  

    Posted Apr 4, 2014
    To be honest, my "experience" is highly unscientifically based on speaking a little bit of German (or eavesdropping) with a total of roughly three dozen Germans through a couple hostel-hopping trips around China before I got tied down to the wife. The primary conclusion was reached when I couldn't understand most of them very well at all (and was often left wondering if they were actually speaking German in the first place), but I was pleasantly relieved when I chatted with a couple Hamburgers who met by chance in Chengdu one summer.

    There was also absinthe that night, along with an Australian guy taking the wheel of our taxi when the driver stopped to ask for directions, and another Aussie peeing for at least a minute and a half in the middle of the road with constant traffic whizzing by (pun not really intended, but recognized), so any reliability you might have been willing to concede to my experience probably goes out the window with that confession.
     
    Keith_O likes this.
  18. #98
    EoinMag

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 4, 2014

    to be fair you're not far off, they are in the same area roughly.

    I lived in North Germany for about 7 years.
     
  19. #99
    PJoyce85

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 4, 2014
    My god is German hard. I learned proper German in school and it is difficult. My wife is German but she speaks Mainzer "dialect" (I type it with quotations because the dialects are really like a different language. The spelling and pronunciation of words can be completely different depending where you are). I know people that grew up 10 minutes apart and they have different words for the same meaning.

    While I rarely hear proper German spoke, it is used with anything official, such as letters, interviews, etc. And even when it is spoke , there are 2 ways to speak it (don't ask me the names because I forgot).

    I could say: (I drove to Berlin)
    Ich bin nach Berlin gefahren OR
    Ich Fuhr nach Berlin

    My wife tells me that they will speak the first (easier to use/remember) but will type the second way as it is shorter.





    Sent from my iPhone using Home
     
  20. masonsjax

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Apr 4, 2014
    I will be visiting Germany this summer. I've begun studying the language a bit to help me at least make an effort to communicate with locals. Now I'm wondering if it's even worth the trouble :)
     
  21. Hopinista

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 4, 2014
    I've yet to meet a German who doesn't speak English.
     
  22. EoinMag

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 4, 2014
    Hang around there long enough, your average German can count to ten.....
     
  23. Hopinista

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 4, 2014
    I didn't really want to hang around when I was there :cool:
     
  24. EoinMag

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 4, 2014
    :eek:
     
  25. alane1

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 4, 2014
    Why was that?

    th4VQES4GS.jpg
     
  26. phug

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 4, 2014
    my exposures to german have been hochdeutsch at saturday school, and schwiizerdutsch. And even then, the regional dialects are so bad. Sometimes My sister has to translate using hochdeutsch between my grandmother and another local who had grown up a few cities away.
     
  27. Hopinista

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 4, 2014
    It was too varm und flaky
     
    alane1 likes this.
  28. skw

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 5, 2014
    The two translate to:
    I have driven to Berlin
    I drove to Berlin

    The same exists in English, several forms of a past tense. The "ich bin gefahren" form is being used more and more frequently.
     
  29. Conman13

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 6, 2014
    How about "Reinheitsgebot"?
     
  30. alane1

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 7, 2014
    In my German dialect it's pronounced "Hugebzeischietz"
     
    EoinMag likes this.
  31. nhindian

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 7, 2014
    Rine-hites-ga-boat
     
  32. Qhrumphf

    Stay Rude, Stay Rebel, Stay SHARP  

    Posted Apr 7, 2014
    Rine-hites-geh-boat.
     
    EoinMag likes this.
  33. skw

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 14, 2014
  34. gometz

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 14, 2014
    Also interesting because Wert means "worth". My theory has been that it comes from the run-off having all the value in it while the leftover grains have little to no value.
     
    funnycreature likes this.
  35. gometz

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 14, 2014
    My parents are from Germany and I am the only one not to be born in Munich of 4 children (I am the youngest, born in Massachusetts). I lived in Germany from 1-4 years old so it is technically my first language, but my English is much better.
    That being said: I get a kick out of talking to people about beer and hearing the various ways to pronounce Hefeweizen, Dunkel-*, Schwarzbier, etc. Sometimes correcting them doesn't do anything, they continue to think their way is correct. They might even be very knowledgeable about beer (more so than me), and will therefore think you are wrong.

    Even French words I hear being said wrong. Saison I have hear pronounced about 3 different ways.
     
  36. GeorgiaMead

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 14, 2014
    As someone who travels internationally I've noticed natives usually can speak English but are much more friendly if you attempt to communicate in their native language.


    Sent from my iPhone using Home Brew
     
  37. MaxStout

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Apr 14, 2014
  38. skw

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 14, 2014
    "Wert" means "worth", correct. However, it does not mean "wort" - "Würze" is what a German brewer calls unfermented beer.
     
  39. rustytypewriter

    Active Member

    Posted Apr 14, 2014
    Hey guys. I'm new here :)

    It was fun reading through this thread, feels like home. Y'all doing a pretty good job with the phonetics too. If I can be of help, let me know.

    This forum is a great place btw.
     
  40. ArcaneXor

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 14, 2014
    You should tell everyone how things I pronounced in Koelsch!
     
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