Hi Thomas,
Probably not going to be able to offer you any advice as I too am a Brit who has been living in Germany for the past quarter of a century speaking German daily and still my accent is detected! Changing the topic completely, my great grandfather was a Thomas Sutherland who came from Caithness and married a wee Welsh woman and never went back. Iâm sure a German tutor will reply with advice regarding accents and I hope I havenât wasted your time. Happy Easter!
Best regards
Alison
Hey Alison,
Thanks for the anecdote, how very nice. Iâm sure you have a lovely accent if youâve been surrounded by native speaks for that length of time. Yeah, I donât think iâll ever mange to get rid of my accent, just looking to iron out the âscottishnessâ, make it flow better and sound softer.
See ya around,
Thomas
Hey THomas
i think that a really important thing is to start to watch movies in german and listen to german podcasts or audiobooks. maybe you will not understand everything at first but it really helped me with my spanish pronunciation. I also listened to a lot of spanish music which was also helpfulâŠ
Tip top advice Larissa! Thank you. Any music or bands (that sing in German) recommendations? I always seem to find songs sung in German that are so cheesy! It makes me not want to listen. Also I was in a bar in Vienna around 4 years ago and there was some Austrian Indie music being played by the DJ that was amazing, but I didnât ask her who the band were. It was a big regret.
Does anyone have any suggestions?
Sportfreunde Stiller
Die Aerzte
Clueso
Soehne Mannheims
And yes you are right, there is a lot of very cheesy german music. I totally agree. The ones I listed above are some of the bands I like though
Cheers
Totally banging! You are a legend Larissa! Bis samstag.
Hi Thomas,
The following topics in our forum could be interesting for you:
Pronunciation topics:
Movies & Series
Smashing Kjanina! Thank you.
Hallo Thomas, another good way to work on your pronunciation would be to record yourself, while reading and then compare yourself to a native german reader.
There is a fabulous website with free audio books, stories and free downloadable PDF Text.
Check out www.vorleser.net Here you can find very easy childrenâs stories, novels and many more interesting audio books and text.
After you have recorded yourself, listen to the native speaker again and critic yourself.
Hey Thomas, as an American who has been learning German and living here for a little over a year and a half I also want to improve my accent. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uVwdxA-OZsY Janina shared this post with a great video on the R I had posted a while ago. It isnât full proof, but it helps you a lot and now I realize how I stuck out like a sore thumb at first with very hard American Rs.
I am also trying to work on my accent, but I think most of the topics that were posted are very geared towards English native speakers. We have a completely different R, we canât get the CH right, we donât realize a Z is sort of like a T in English in German and sometimes we ignore or canât get the pitch down on ö or ĂŒ. I am trying to be cognizant of the stereotypical mistakes that I make and give me away. This video below is a funny example:
I would also try to focus on it more as getting the right pronunciation down as compared to losing your accent. Think of all the people you know who speak great English with a funny accent. The roles are just reversed and now you have the funny accent EDIT: As a Scotsman you probably also have a funny accent in English to me as well.
Thatâs fantastic Dagmar, a wonderful practice suggestion and that website looks great. Thank you.
Thanks Kgeisl1,
I think you are right on the money with focusing on pronunciation.
The video on the R sound is very good, I wasnât really aware of that so now I can focus on on it, thanks. The only transferable German phonic sound we Scots have is the CH sound as we use it for the word âlochâ. I suppose that helps with the R sound too as itâs an open throaty sound.
Thanks for the insight.
Thomas
As some people mentioned, youâre probably never going to eradicate your accent completely, remember thatâs totally okay and just as beautiful as a native German accent
There are also many different way to pronounciate, depending on accents. If you live in Germany Iâd suggest sticking to the one of your region, if not always ask your tutors to present the âHochdeutschâ pronunciation. Itâs the so called âhigher germanâ, meaning the closest to a unified accent.
And then lots of listening to podcasts and movies of course! Wish you all the best.
I found the Fluent Forever app very good for this. It does âear trainingâ flashcards, which first trains your ear to hear the different sounds, which makes it much easier to reproduce.
Hi Thomas / Larissa ,
a bit dated but I always liked âElement of crimeâ
Cheers from Berlin,
Melanie
Hi Thomas,
maybe you heard a song by âBilderbuchâ back then in Vienna
âŠthey have a new (?) one out now called âMr.Refrigeratorâ
Another, older German song which I always liked and remembered today, because an Italian cover version was on the radio is from a band called âWir sind Heldenâ
âŠâofficial German learning songâ according to a comment on YouTube
Iâm a fan of Spotifyâs Deutsche Poesie playlist. It tends toward folk-pop, which is what I like, but I also find that this style of music is good for language leaners because the lyrics a little easier to hear.
This is fantastic, what a recommendation. Thank you!
Soooooo schön, Danke