230 CultureShock! Austria
Gender
Nouns can be feminine, as in Die Zeitung (the newspaper);
masculine, as in Der Mann (the man); or neutral, as in Das
Restaurant (the restaurant). There is no rhyme or reason for
which noun gets which gender, but there are patterns. Take
this as a challenge for the memory.
COMPOUND WORDS
Compound words are mesmerising. Several words are
‘scrunched’ into one. Some examples are:
Kinderbewahrungsanstalten Childcare
Donaudampfschifffahrts
gesellschaftskapitän
Captain of the Danube
Steamship Company
Unabhängigkeitserklärungen
Declaration of
Independence
Wiederherstellungsbestrebungen Endeavor to reconstruct
GERMAN IS PHONETIC
The loveliest part of the German language is that it is
phonetic. All vowels and consonants are pronounced, and
the tricky ones lie only with a few sounds:
reich (rich) Like Loch in Loch Ness but
pronounced very softly
Schüssel (bowl) Has the ‘sh’ sound, as in shame
zahlen (to pay) Pronounced ‘ts’
Mutter (mother) Same vowel sound as in book
Vogel (bird) Pronounced with a hard ‘f’, as
in food
stehen (stand)
Pronounced as if there was a
‘ch’ between s and t
stoß (push, knock)
Ends with a sharp ‘s’. The
German language is slowly
evolving to replace the ß with a
double s, or ‘ss’.