I'm European and rarely have trouble pronouncing names, but Goethe is really weird to me...

I'm European and rarely have trouble pronouncing names, but Goethe is really weird to me. Is it really pronounced Gur-tah and not Goh-teh (or similar)?

Also Goethe general I suppose.

Other urls found in this thread:

merriam-webster.com/dictionary/Goethe
inogolo.com/pronunciation/Goethe
youtube.com/watch?v=IhnUgAaea4M
vocaroo.com/i/s0FjK96VCLdV
twitter.com/SFWRedditImages

Where exactly did you find an "r" in Goethe?

Just google it you dip, look up some German pronouncing it and be done with it

I don't know how I'd go about typing it, but it's easy for anyone who isn't retarded.

merriam-webster.com/dictionary/Goethe

Am I the only one hearing the r? I initially thought it was an American thing, but I hear it so often that I'm starting to think that even Germans disagree about it.

Geth, with ge as in get.

Like in Mass Effect?

inogolo.com/pronunciation/Goethe

Also, why does it say that the R is not pronounced, but the audio clearly pronounces it? What the hell is it with this guy's name? I might just end up calling him Johann Wolfgang von and be done with it.

its pronounced göthe

There is no r, what the fuck are you smoking?
Try pronouncing "earl", but drop the 'rl'. Stop at the very first noise. The sound of 'ea' in 'earl' is the vowel ö or o. Don't get to the part where your tongue starts rising, that's too far. That includes the r. That is wrong. o/ea, not or
Göthe.

Oe is often used for ö/o because Anglos are dumb

oe=ö

it's also the same eu in french.

>I'm European

Why is that supposed to be relevant and how is that as an umbrella demographic in any way relevant to your ability to pronounce German. Kys faggot

Who cares, pronounce it in your own accent and just say it's your dialect.

FUCK YOU YANKS IT'S YOGHURT NOT YOOOWGUURRRT

Do Amerifucks actually pronounce Yoghurt as 'Yow-gurt'

Pronunciation is one of the biggest spooks. This is not a joke, linguistics is my property and it will tell you that pronunciation is arbitrary.

There definitely is an R sound in that audio.

>Tfw used to pronounce it 'Go-thuh'

There isn't. You're only hearing it because you're still incapable of conceiving of that sound without having it correspond to your "ur" sound.

>Oe is often used for ö/o because Anglos are dumb
No, it's often used because it isn't always possible to have the ¨ for technical reasons.

People should definitely read Goethe's letter correspondence with Carlyle.

Very cute desu.

it's pronounced "goth". the es are silent.

>There isn't. You're only hearing it because you're still incapable of conceiving of that sound without having it correspond to your "ur" sound.

This. Americans are forever hopeless on the German oe sound

It's a german oe sound, which is similar to a ur sound in english. Don't get all confused about letters it just sounds similar.
Like how the spanish word for chicken is pollo but is pronounced almost identically to the word bollo, which means pussy.

lmao

> It's a german oe sound, which is similar to a ur sound in english

There isn't. You're only hearing it because you're still incapable of conceiving of that sound without having it correspond to your "ur" sound.


Yep, there is no consensus. Thanks for confirming.

youtube.com/watch?v=IhnUgAaea4M

GUH TUH

How fucking hard is it to gomprehend

dude it really isn't that complicated, when someone tells you it sounds like ur they mean the vowel part, not the soft r that it may or may not slide towards, and they use that example because it's the closest you get to that sound in your language, not because it's a perfect fit

and for that matter, depending on the accent, the -ir sound could be a much better approximation: try saying girth, then suppress any remnants of the r you might have

Guh-Tah, actually.

vocaroo.com/i/s0FjK96VCLdV

It sounds like the non-rhotic R than British people use. I hear it to

I know how to pronounce it, it's just that native English people tell you not to pronounce the r and then go on to pronounce it. Non-rhotic, more like neurotic.

The page literally has gə(r)-tə

sassy

>Goo-tah

Close, but no cigar.

is right, with a very soft 'T' as well - for which I can't think of an English equivalent.

Göt-he

anglo detected

>tfw I'm trying to learn German and this is 100% true

I don't know it bothers me so much, I'm learning the language to fucking read books, not speak. It's such a difficult sound to form with my stupid tongue. That must be why women don't like it when I go down on them.

y'all motherfuckas never took intro to linguistics? its phoneme vs morpheme

there is no 'r' sound in its phoneme form but there is in its morpheme sound

Goethe

Take the sound from english word 'gut' and the 'u' in the expression 'uh' (you don't prononce the 'h') or the 'e' in 'err'

no there still isn't
>intro to linguistics
obviously wasn't enough

Gorete

its just "gethe"

>Close, but no cigar.
B-but I'm a native speaker.

that is entirely incorrect. Morphemes are units of meaning. The only unit of meaning in Goethe is "Goethe". You may have taken a linguistics course, but you definitely didn't pay attention.

In IPA the pronunciation is [ˈɡoːtə]. You're only hearing an r because (British) English speakers can't into the o sound, and so you make a shitty approximation of it which includes an r sound.

Are you German? Do you proficiently speak a Germanic language that isn't English? If not, it's not surprising that you can't pronounce this.
OE was largely replaced by Ö in Germanic languages, but retroactively enacting it on names makes record-keeping hell, so Goethe remained Goethe and Schoenberg remained Schoenberg. Pronounce his name as Göthe (no English th), or if you're familiar with French, Gœthe.

is right. I'm a native Portuguese speaker and it's even worse for us: anglophones don't do "exotic" vowels except before R, M, N, NG, etc. Hence "clever" and "cultured" Americans saying "som pahwlo," "toodoh beng," and in this case, "gurtuh."

what's a good online resource for learning that kind of stuff?