• @lugal
    link
    395 hours ago

    It’s the same in German: /mɛʁˈt͡seːdəs/

    Despite what other commentators say who are evil and eager to spread lies about the German language

    • @Ultraviolet
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      English
      338 minutes ago

      However, in Spanish, which is the name’s language of origin despite being a German car, they’re the same. All e as in red. Mercedes.

      • @lugal
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        114 minutes ago

        True, it’s a common female name, or was idk. Iirc the car is named after the daughter of the inventor. The German pronunciation is the butchered version of the Spanish first name so I’m on no moral high ground

    • @SpaceNoodle
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      44 hours ago

      E is super flexible in German

      e, ae, oe, ue, eu, ie, ei, ee all make distinct consistent sounds

    • Ephera
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      fedilink
      65 hours ago

      On a phonetic level, some specialist will be able to discern the different E-sounds, but they’re still very similar. It’s definitely not like the English pronunciation where it’s completely different sounds.

      • @lugal
        link
        55 hours ago

        It’s basically the three E sounds we have in German (short, long and “unstressed”) but I see that to the untrained ear, this isn’t obvious