Contents
•
A.01 • Das Alphabet ~
German alphabet and
Pronunciation Guide
•
A.02 • Phrase Book ~
Common phrases in German
•
A.03 • Resources ~
Online Resources for German Language Students
•
A.04 • Names ~
Namen - a list of common,
modern German names
•
A.05 • History –
German history
•
A.06 • False Friends ~
All the German words that look like English words, but have different
meanings
A.01 • Alphabet
The German alphabet, like English, consists of 26 basic letters. However, there are also combined
letters and four umlauted forms (an
umlaut
is the pair of dots placed over certain vowels). The
following table includes a listing of all these letters and a guide to their pronunciation.
As in English,
letter sounds can differ depending upon where within a word the letter occurs. The first pronunciation
given below (second column) is that in English of the letter (or combination) itself. Reading down this
column and pronouncing the "English" words will recite the alphabet
auf Deutsch
("in German"). Note
that letter order is exactly the same as in English, but pronunciation is not for many of the letters. In the
list of
pronunciation notes, no entry means essentially "pronounced as in English".
A (ah)
Long 'a' as 'a' in 'father' (ah); short 'a' as 'o' in 'come'
B (bay)
Pronounced like 'p' when at the end of a word
C (tsay)
See combination letter forms;
without a following 'h': before 'e', 'i', 'y', 'ä', 'ö' like the german letter 'z' else like 'k'
D (day)
Pronounced like 't' when at the end of a word; slightly more "dental"
E (ay)
Long 'e' as 'a' in 'late' (ay); there is no movement in
the sound as in the english
equivalent. Short 'e' as 'e' in 'pet'. In unstressed syllables like 'a' in 'about' or 'e' in 'garden'
F (ef)
G (gay)
Pronounced like 'g' in 'get'; pronounced like 'k' when at the end of a word;
pronounced like 'ich'-sound (see below) in the suffix '-ig' at the end of words
H (hah)
like 'h' in 'house' only at the beginning of words or a syllable
before 'a', 'i', 'o', 'u', 'y', 'ä', 'ö', 'ü' (only if these vowels don't belong to a suffix), else
silent
I
(ee)
Long 'i' as 'e' in 'seen' (ee); short 'i' as 'i' in 'pit'
J (yot)
Pronounced like 'y' in 'yard'
K (kah)
L (el)
Slightly more "dental"
M (em)
N (en)
Slightly more "dental"; in 'ng' like in 'singing'; like in 'finger'
before 'a', 'i', 'o', 'u', 'y', 'ä', 'ö', 'ü' (only if these vowels don't belong to a suffix)
O (oh)
Long 'o' as 'o' in 'open' (oh), there is no movement in the sound as in the english
equivalent. Short 'o' as 'o' in 'pot'
P (pay)
Q (koo)
Pronounced like 'k'; only occurs in the combination 'qu',
which is pronounced like
'kv' not like 'kw'
R (air)
trilled (see below)
S (ess)
In Germany, pronounced like 'z'; pronounced like 's' in 'sound' when at the end of a
word, after consonants
(except 'l', 'm', 'n', ng') and before consonants; in Austria, pronounced like 'z' only when
it appears between
two vowels, pronounced like 's' otherwise. Pronounced like 'sh' in the
beginning of a word before 'p' or 't'
T (tay)
Slightly more "dental"
U (oo)
Long 'u' as 'oo' in 'moon' (oo); short 'u' as 'u' in 'put'
V (fow)
Pronounced like 'f' when at the end of a word and in a few but often used words
(in most cases of germanic origin), in general at the beginning of German geographical
and family names. In all other cases like 'v'
W (vay)
Pronounced like 'v'
X (iks)
Pronounced like 'ks'
Y
(oopsilon
)
Pronounced like 'ü' (see below), except in words of English origin, where it is
pronounced
like in English
Z (tset)
Pronounced like 'ts'
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: