@[email protected] to [email protected]English • 5 months agoGerman-speakers of Lemmy, does 'Amerika' normally mean 'the Americas' or 'the USA'?message-square26fedilinkarrow-up145arrow-down16
arrow-up139arrow-down1message-squareGerman-speakers of Lemmy, does 'Amerika' normally mean 'the Americas' or 'the USA'?@[email protected] to [email protected]English • 5 months agomessage-square26fedilink
minus-square@andrewtalink1•5 months agoStupid question is that how they would spell America in Germany “Amerika”?
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink4•5 months agoJust wait until you see how Americans spell Deutschland…
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink3•5 months agoJust wait till you hear how we pronounce “Chicago”.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink3•5 months agoEh, as a Bostonian I’m always much more impressed by how people’s tongues try to leave orbit when they first encounter Worcester.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink2•5 months agoIt’s obviously pronounced Kicago, just like Chamäleon, Chemie and China :)
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink1•5 months agoBut Chemie comes from Chemnitz (obviously) so it must be pronounced with K Don’t know where China comes from, maybe from Chinese which is obviously pronounced with K.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish2•5 months agoThe hard “c” sound as you see in America is always a ‘k’ auf deutsch.
minus-squareCaptain Bakalinkfedilink1•edit-25 months agoSomething a person that definitely doesn’t speak german would say. We spell it exactly like this.
Stupid question is that how they would spell America in Germany “Amerika”?
Yep, that’s how we spell it.
Ja
Just wait until you see how Americans spell Deutschland…
Just wait till you hear how we pronounce “Chicago”.
Eh, as a Bostonian I’m always much more impressed by how people’s tongues try to leave orbit when they first encounter Worcester.
It’s obviously pronounced Kicago, just like Chamäleon, Chemie and China :)
I threw up a little…
But Chemie comes from Chemnitz (obviously) so it must be pronounced with K
Don’t know where China comes from, maybe from Chinese which is obviously pronounced with K.
The hard “c” sound as you see in America is always a ‘k’ auf deutsch.
That makes sense
Something a person that definitely doesn’t speak german would say. We spell it exactly like this.
…Yes, that’s why they’re asking.