pandabear wrote:
I first heard of Asperger's last June 21, when my supervisor taunted me by telling me that I had "Ass Burgers." She had only heard about it probably the same day, from a psychologist who works in the same place and who told her that I had Asperger's.
Is the A pronounced the way that most North Americans pronounce the short a? Or is it more of an "ah" sound?
The "p" should be pronounced as a "p", rather than a "b", shouldn't it?
And, is the "g" a hard "g", as in "go", or a soft "g", as in "cage"?
It does seem weird, to have been considered as weird or eccentric my whole life, or as a "dork" in my younger days, suddenly to have this revealed to me when I am 48. I had no idea that I was this obvious.
Anyway, what is the correct pronounciation? I hope that it really isn't "Ass Burgers"
Hahns Ahsperger
The G is almost ALWAYS hard like "guten tag"(gooten tahg) (good day) The G in good day is the same as well. The e is almost always like the e in ten. The R is a soft R, almost like the R in air. In fact, hahns ahspairgair is close. OH YEAH, the p is a P! Like pear, pair,pal, or "Poltergeist" ANOTHER german word adopted into english. The r is the english variant is usually harder than german but, otherwise, the english is JUST like the german. German IS very phonetic. There are some dipthongs that are ignored in german (Like 'th' being a t like try). There are some like 'ie' and 'ei'(Look at geist above! It is the german word for ghost or spirit. The ei sounds like the i in ice. It is a long I. The ie as in the english word spiel(another german adoption) sounds like the ee in beet. ) that are pronounced different. Otherwise, the rules are pretty stable.