Read German Made Simple: Learn to Speak and Understand German Quickly and Easily Online
Authors: Ph.d. Arnold Leitner
Tags: #German Language
V v
(fow)
W w
(vay)
X x
(īx)
Y y
(īpsīlon)
Z z
(tsĕt)
ü (
u-Umlaut
) ö (
o-Umlaut
)
Qu
appears in a few words, and is pronounced
kv
. Thus:
Quartier
(
kvahr-
teer
) quarters.
y
is found only in a few proper names. Thus:
Meyer
(also spelled
Meier
and
Mayer
) and
Bayern
(
bei
-ern
)
Bavaria.
The German Letters s, ss and ß
German orthography knows three different kinds of “s”: “s,” “ss” and “ß.” It is extremely important to know the difference between these three kinds of “s.”
“ss” stands after short vowel sounds and is not voiced: Fluss, essen, dass
“ß” stands after diphthongs (au, eu, äu, ai) and after long vowels. It is also not voiced: heißen, groß, weiß
“s” is usually voiced and stands between two vowels: leise, Wiese, Riese. It can, however, be also not voiced and be found at the beginning, the middle and end of German words: das, bis, super.
Summary of Vowel Sounds
Long | Short |
Ger. Vowel ā ē ī ō ū | ă ĕ ĭ ŏ ŭ |
Pron. Key ah ay ee oh | ă ĕ ĭŏ |
ā Vater ( fah - ter ) father | ă Mann ( mānn ) man; was ( văs ) what |
ē zehn ( tsayn ) ten | ĕ Wetter ( vĕt - ter ) weather |
ī wir ( veer ) we; die ( dee ) the | ĭ Winter ( vin - ter ) winter |
ō Brot ( broht ) bread | ŏ Onkel ( ŏ n -kel ) uncle |
ū Schule ( sh -le ) school | ŭ Butter ( boo - ter ) butter |
zählen ( tsay - len ) to count | März ( mĕrtz ) March |
hören ( h - ren ) to hear | zwölf ( tsv oUlf ) twelve |
fühlen ( f h - len ) to feel | füllen ( f l - len ) to fill |