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There is only 1 e. It is difficult to add the 2 dots that belong above the o, but can we at least get the rest right.
Not accurate, Mo.In English, the o with the "umlaut" above it translates (err, is digigraphed) to "oe".So, it's Schröder or Schroeder.
Quote from: Roy H. on November 21, 2021, 01:21:05 PMNot accurate, Mo.In English, the o with the "umlaut" above it translates (err, is digigraphed) to "oe".So, it's Schröder or Schroeder. You've sent me down the rabbit hole of trying to pronounce the vowel with the umlaut correctly and I can't quite get it. I'm either going too "surfer dude" with it or heavy Baltimore accent, but can't quite get the German sound out of it, myself. I'm not a naturally good mimic though.
Quote from: Moranis on November 21, 2021, 01:17:56 PMThere is only 1 e. It is difficult to add the 2 dots that belong above the o, but can we at least get the rest right.Schröder is easy when you type it once in your phone. Just type Schr, hold down the O on your keyboard, pick ö and finish the rest. Do it a couple times and your phone will remember it’s Schröder.
Quote from: gift on November 22, 2021, 12:29:21 PMQuote from: Roy H. on November 21, 2021, 01:21:05 PMNot accurate, Mo.In English, the o with the "umlaut" above it translates (err, is digigraphed) to "oe".So, it's Schröder or Schroeder. You've sent me down the rabbit hole of trying to pronounce the vowel with the umlaut correctly and I can't quite get it. I'm either going too "surfer dude" with it or heavy Baltimore accent, but can't quite get the German sound out of it, myself. I'm not a naturally good mimic though.It’s not even a uniform pronunciation. I learned Bavarian German throughout high school, and got to college and was told I was pronouncing everything wrong.Regardless, foreign languages have never come easily to me.