Does the elocution of an American trying to speak German nouns funny?

I am learning German and hold trouble with the diction. My teacher say I have a sticky American accent, but he is from the United States and doesn't really enjoy a German background, he have never lived in a German country for any long length of time. Would I be impenetrable for you?



Answers:    I've lived in Germany very soon for 14 years and speak German fluently. I still have some articulation, but not nearly as bad as other Americans I've hear. As long as your grammar is correct, it doesn't concern if you have an elocution.
The accent of somebody who learn a foreign language sounds ever funny. I'm sure it's sounds funny, if i try to speek english (i'm home-grown german), but it's o.k. It's not ridicoulous. It's nice.
It doesn't matter.
And, for example, i be born in Bavaria and i live contained by bavaria.
If i speek to one of north germany, for example Hamburg or Berlin, my accent sounds funny to the other and the north german diction sounds funny to me

I think speaking beside accent is nice and it's nice if folks learn foreign language.
of course it's going to nouns funny it's not your native communication plus your changing the approach you speak entirely when you speak another language and that's going to filch some time German requires a good throat control, specially near vowels and deep pronunciation skills. I absolutely can distinguish and American speaking German...the accent is merely as funny when a frenchman speaks english.
I think that's OK, I really don't guardianship where the folks coming from and how they are talking the speaking, important is they try to swot and trying to talk. This is nice. I revise my German, was not graceful too, but I got it. So in recent times working hard near that and everybody can make it. Does it really concern if you have an american diction ? Important is, if you order a hot dog that you will not achieve a herring -- am I right ? There are so many accent in Germany an Amercan and a French more --- doesn't issue. But don't try to teach a German German close to my friend Svetik from Russia. But this girls yeah they ever know everything better and us boys have no balanced chance.
Greetings from Hamburg, Germany
Heinz
ps: If a Bavarian tries to speak --- is that a argot?
After 30 years here in Germany I still own my Canadian Accent and all my friends here love to listen to me conversation. Hallo, Wie Gehts? no its not a problem.there are so several accents contained by germany there is no set german diction anymore, most like it if you even attempt the idiom. just speak clear and dont mumble and every german here will know how to understand you i guarantee it. Lived her for 6 years in a minute and never had a problem of someone not good judgment me when I speak. Most younger people close to it clear nad most will find it a ''cute'' accent. I live contained by bravaria and the platt deutch (Hamburg) can seem rather strange( they like to read out something like moing moing during midday) but nearby is no right or wrong german anymore seems it is adjectives about correct grammatics....Good luck
Accents are cute.this is what I hear almost every single daytime. I am a German living in the US and I still hold my German accent after lots of years living here...and those seem to similar to it.
My husband is American and when he speaks German he sounds cute to me.and I am sure he will never ever in his enthusiasm sound similar to a German speaking German.
So do not worry in the region of your accent...it is fine to own an accent!
German is a to some extent difficult language. The language rules is awful.
And - YES - it sounds funny for German proofed ears when an American speaks German.
Some even think that Americans are chewing gum while they're discussion as it sounds a little close to this.
I'm German and started to learn English when I be 10 years old - and still study since 40 years. Cause there's always something unknown and you never stop learning.
I even can explain to you if the person is any an American or Briton or an Australian or neither of these.

And AlwinE is right about pronouncing "ch". But here is another thing aboriginal English speakers can't pronounce: it's the "pf". They usually "forget" the "p" and pronounce simply "f" only. There is some practicing basic until it works for native English speaking tongues.
As all right as it is hard for us Germans to pronounce "th" which be really one of my first lessons - especially when there's a "s" close to it resembling in "months" and similar words. That nearly twists my tongue 180°. but next to some practice it's possible.
American accent is tremendously obvious but I wouldn't
appointment it funny and usually it's not hard to get the message.
The German you learn contained by school is merely spoken
by a minority natively anyway. A remotely normal
American articulation is easier to understand than
some German dialects. So unless you want to
blend contained by there's no problem with an articulation.
Hi, I'm native Gerrrman.

Unintellegible? No, within no way. I'd break my tongue surrounded by saying "unintelligable" smaller quantity than you'd probably do in aphorism "Eine Weisswurst und ein Bier, bitte". (Alright, I'm serving clichés right now, but what the heck.) -- See, I don't even know the spelling of that unitelligent word.

Alright, let's dance to a decent lesson:

First point, Americans and Brits (except the Scots) can't pronounce a German r decently. Watch a few episodes of StarTrek TOS and listen to Scotty at engineering, and you'll grab hold of it. Practice.

Next most important entry is the ch. It sounds like a sore throat more or less to vomit. Practice, and try NOT to vomit. Only your larynx is involved, your tongue stays calm and unmoved. (If you find that diffcult, muse about us Germans practicing the th nouns trying not to bite off the tip rotten our tongue.)

The German umlauts, "a, "o, ü, are a bit difficult to explain, because there is no pronounciation equivalent surrounded by English. I always chuckle about English speaking culture talking more or less the "Führer", because almost nobody gets it right, not even the BBC contained by their documentaries.

But why do you care? I speak German next to a distinct Bavarian accent, and I'm not ashamed of it. You'll be accepted by your accent, and that's a well-mannered thing. Use verbal skill the way you surface it's appropriate, and the way you grain good, and you'll be greeting. Everywhere.
uhm not at all,possibly to some but overall americans with any accent sounds cute overall i guess germans dont care anyway as long you speak the sentence contained by the right order i speak both language as mother tongues and I gotta tell you shouldn't stop learnin it, it does nouns funny but NOT bad or ridiculous, so don't listen to your instructor and continue learnin, survey german movies, try to speak lotsa german, maybe even to original germans and you're gonna be excellent at german someday!GOOD LUCK!

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