Dumb question but, pronunciation?
Moderators: pilkguns, m1963, David Levene, Spencer, Richard H
Dumb question but, pronunciation?
This is kind of embarrassing, but I figure it's better to humiliate myself on here rather than in person when speaking about it.
I'm was curious about the pronunciation on several shooting related brands, the ones that come to mind at the moment are Anschutz, Feinwerkbau, and the ammunition Eley.
Feel free to add in others that I can't think of right now.
Thank you.
I'm was curious about the pronunciation on several shooting related brands, the ones that come to mind at the moment are Anschutz, Feinwerkbau, and the ammunition Eley.
Feel free to add in others that I can't think of right now.
Thank you.
Re: Dumb question but, pronunciation?
On shut z some say On shoot zCsizzle wrote:This is kind of embarrassing, but I figure it's better to humiliate myself on here rather than in person when speaking about it.
I'm was curious about the pronunciation on several shooting related brands, the ones that come to mind at the moment are Anschutz, Feinwerkbau, and the ammunition Eley.
Feel free to add in others that I can't think of right now.
Thank you.
E lee
I think names like Feinwerbau and Anschutz would tend to have pronunciations that would differ as to region. I have heard them as Richard says, and in my part of the world, Anschutz is pronounced (Ann shoots) and Feinwerkbau is pronounced (fine work bow), or (fine verk bow) by those that are, or are trying to be German. I have never heard Eley pronounced any other way than how Richard said, but I have seen it spelled several different ways. I think Richards' pronunciation of Anschutz is probably the correct one, or how it would be spoken in German.
German 'w' is hard, hence Feinwerkbau = fine vairk bow. Bow rhymes with 'how', not 'low'. First syllable stressed.
The second syllable in Anschutz is something between 'shoots' and 'shuts'.
The first syllable of Eley is stressed.
Oh, and it's Aluminium, with the third syllable stressed, not aloominum!
Now, can anyone tell me what the heck to do about Russian Cyrillic text and Polish pronunciation?
The second syllable in Anschutz is something between 'shoots' and 'shuts'.
The first syllable of Eley is stressed.
Oh, and it's Aluminium, with the third syllable stressed, not aloominum!
Now, can anyone tell me what the heck to do about Russian Cyrillic text and Polish pronunciation?
Here is the man pronouncing his name.
The master maker. Dieter Anschutz.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Swlf1QbvQuw
Ter
The master maker. Dieter Anschutz.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Swlf1QbvQuw
Ter
Pronunciation
The fine old German company calls it Fine Verk Bau Good Shooting Bill Horton
Not really,it's kinda going towards the toilet....please refer to Greece and SpainJijo wrote:And you wonder why the rest of the world think Americans are a bunch of a-holes with a mentality like that?toznerd wrote:You can't really mispronounce any of those, as long as you put the correct accent on the dollar sign!
toznerd
Fortunatly the Euro is coming on strong...
You felt the need to dig up a two year old thread for that nugget of wisdom, with a mentality like that you could join them.Jijo wrote:And you wonder why the rest of the world think Americans are a bunch of a-holes with a mentality like that?toznerd wrote:You can't really mispronounce any of those, as long as you put the correct accent on the dollar sign!
toznerd
Fortunatly the Euro is coming on strong...
Actually it will be interesting to see if the Euro survives at all, lots of unrest in the EU between the haves and the have nots. Its sucks when you can't control your own monetary policy to influence national issues.
Guest,
I can spell Anschuetz and Haemmerli properly. I would be happy if my computer had a simple shift to get umlauts on my letters, but it doesn't. So sometimes we in the US think that it looks a bit better w/o writing ae, oe or ue to indicate the umlaut. I think Google accepts any of the 3 variants. Don't you?
I can spell Anschuetz and Haemmerli properly. I would be happy if my computer had a simple shift to get umlauts on my letters, but it doesn't. So sometimes we in the US think that it looks a bit better w/o writing ae, oe or ue to indicate the umlaut. I think Google accepts any of the 3 variants. Don't you?