Hotdog
Well-Known Member
Only prime you ever had was Optimus on your dresser.
If you only knew.
Only prime you ever had was Optimus on your dresser.
Lol
Wtf
I'm so glad I don't live in the middle east.
If you only knew.
Do tell, bruh. We all friends.
I don't want to make all my friends jealous
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ExtsL1GvsL4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ExtsL1GvsL4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ExtsL1GvsL4
This sounds like a challenge.Bandwaggoner?
I was taught the opposite: use the "o" sound with you lips in the "ee" position.
It's ok but not perfect. With this method you would rather make an ü. The back of the tongue has to be lower when you do an 'ö' than when you are making an 'i'.
I've got Schroeder fatigue. I think if I hear that ****ing word again I'm going to scream
No, that won't work at all.
Mrs. Wolf, a German native, said otherwise. Now, perhaps what she taught us was some peculiar dialect (I've heard that the Berlin, Swiss, and Austrian dialects are as different as Scottish, Welsh, and London dialects) or even peculiar to her. Nevertheless, we were taught all umlauts were done using the mouth in the shape of the "ee", and it certainly changes the sound.
Mrs. Wolf, a German native, said otherwise. Now, perhaps what she taught us was some peculiar dialect (I've heard that the Berlin, Swiss, and Austrian dialects are as different as Scottish, Welsh, and London dialects) or even peculiar to her. Nevertheless, we were taught all umlauts were done using the mouth in the shape of the "ee", and it certainly changes the sound.
Edit: You're right about dialects, and I'm not sure exactly how the vowels would sound in some random strange dialect. But it would be very strange if a German teacher were teaching you anything other than "hoch Deutsch".
I've never taught English as a second language, or been trained to do so. Are people taught that they have to teach Nebraska pronunciations when they teach ESL, or do they just teach it as they learned to speak it?
...a standardized form of the German language (Standarddeutsch), used as a written language, in formal contexts, and for communication between different dialect areas, which everybody in the German-speaking regions is supposed to understand, and which is taught to foreigners.
One Brow said:As for the sound from a wide, flat mouth making "o" or "u", maybe it isn't much like what you expect, but they sound similar to me, certainly different from a standard "o" or "u".