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  • If your native language is German

  • but you're speaking English

  • you may have a German accent

  • But what does this actually mean?

  • In this video I'll be looking at the features that

  • create a German accent in English

  • There's no W sound in German

  • The letter W in the German alphabet

  • represents a V sound

  • This means Germans are likely to pronounce

  • W sounds as V in English

  • A word like "with" may be pronounced "vith"

  • When you see the letters NG

  • in the middle of a word in English

  • the G is usually pronounced as G like...

  • But the letters NG in German may not have that G sound

  • So a German speaker may pronounce "hunger" as...

  • Linguists give vowels names

  • to make it easier to talk about them

  • The /əː/ vowel in the words....

  • is called the NURSE vowel

  • and it's made with the lips relaxed

  • It doesn't exist in German

  • but this vowel made with the lips rounded

  • sounds similar

  • and Germans are likely to use it

  • for the NURSE vowel in English

  • In Germany, Austria and Switzerland

  • people speak different varieties of the German language

  • but most of these people

  • will share the same characteristic accent features

  • when speaking English

  • The speaker in the next clip is originally from Austria

  • but he also rounds his lips for the NURSE vowel

  • You can see it in the words...

  • The terms voiced and voiceless

  • describe whether a sound is made

  • with the vocal folds vibrating or not

  • If you make a long V sound

  • you can feel the vocal folds vibrating inside the larynx

  • If you make an F sound, there are no vibrations

  • German words don't end in voiced consonants

  • This means that final voiced consonants in English may turn voicelessthey are devoiced

  • You can hear the voiced V sound in...

  • turn into a voiceless F sound

  • The voiced Z sound marks the plural in the words....

  • But a German speaker is likely to devoice that Z

  • and turn it into a voiceless S

  • Similarly the voiced D sound in...

  • turns into a voiceless T sound

  • The /a/ vowel sound in words like...

  • is called the TRAP vowel

  • German speakers are likely to change this vowel

  • to an /ɛ/ sound when speaking English

  • The /aʊ/ vowel in words like "houses" and "allow"

  • is called the MOUTH vowel

  • In contemporary British English

  • the vowel starts more front in the mouth

  • But German speakers are likely to start this vowel

  • further back

  • which gives the impression of a deeper sound

  • These are just some of the features

  • that create a German accent in English

  • Of course there are many others like R and L sounds

  • but I can't cover everything in one video

  • It's not easy speaking another language

  • Firstly the sound system may be different

  • We saw this earlier with the English NURSE vowel /əː/

  • which doesn't exist in German

  • Secondly the letter-to-sound correspondence

  • may be different from language to language

  • For example, the letter W is pronounced as W in English

  • but V in German

  • It's important to realise that the same letter

  • may represent one sound in your language

  • but a different sound in another language

  • If you're a non-native English speaker

  • who wants to improve your pronunciation

  • then sign up for my online course

  • Go to my website to find out more

  • If you've enjoyed this video

  • please like it

  • and share it with your German-speaking friends!

If your native language is German

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為什麼德國人說英語時有口音?| 改善你的口音 (Why Do German Speakers Have An Accent When Speaking English? | Improve Your Accent)

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    Summer 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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