[Facts] Re: German pronounciation question
in reply to a message by Anya Mel’nik or Mel’nyk
They don't just say any S as the English Z.
Any S before a T is SH not Z. 'Stau' (traffic jam) for example is said with a SH sound at the beginning. So is the name Stefan. The name Sven is also not said with a Z sound, but just a regular S. I'd assume they'd use the Sven sound for Svitlana too.
Edit: it probably depends if in the foreign name the S is followed by a vowel or not.
Any S before a T is SH not Z. 'Stau' (traffic jam) for example is said with a SH sound at the beginning. So is the name Stefan. The name Sven is also not said with a Z sound, but just a regular S. I'd assume they'd use the Sven sound for Svitlana too.
Edit: it probably depends if in the foreign name the S is followed by a vowel or not.
This message was edited 3/12/2025, 7:15 AM
Replies
Well I knew sh, before t, but I didn't know before v.
But what if it was like Sanya or Slava? and maybe Svitlana would still be said with s? Like in Russian е is pronounced "ye" normally but in foreign names it is "eh". So I wondered if German maybe does similar thing here?
I think ss (ß) is always s sound, would I want to use this for if I wanted German to pronounce these names with s or would Germans assume that foreign name with s is prounced same?
But what if it was like Sanya or Slava? and maybe Svitlana would still be said with s? Like in Russian е is pronounced "ye" normally but in foreign names it is "eh". So I wondered if German maybe does similar thing here?
I think ss (ß) is always s sound, would I want to use this for if I wanted German to pronounce these names with s or would Germans assume that foreign name with s is prounced same?
This message was edited 3/12/2025, 7:25 AM