halfway between gut-uh and goo-tah. It's that German vowel.
2007-04-18 04:43:09
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answer #1
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answered by Philo 7
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The G is hard - not like J
The oe is like a longer version of the indefinite article "a"
The the, the last 3 letters is te - t followed by a normal length indefinite article "a"
This indefinite article sound is often written as an upside down lower case e in dictionaries.
I'm English , so the above comments reflect how English people pronounce these words.
Someone has suggested there is a "ch" sound in the middle - I think there isn't
If you speak French, the oe in Goethe rhymes with peu and is about the same length
2007-04-18 04:50:55
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answer #2
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answered by rosie recipe 7
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Gurta comes close sufficient. there's no th sound in modern German. the "oe" umlaut isn't an english sound yet each physique will understand who you propose in case you're saying "Gurta".. in simple terms make the T short.
2016-11-25 19:40:20
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answer #3
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answered by satterfield 4
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As in Gerte
2007-04-18 05:04:07
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answer #4
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answered by gibson w 2
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Grr ta
2007-04-18 04:41:31
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answer #5
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answered by chellyk 5
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GUR-tuh
2007-04-18 04:42:25
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answer #6
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answered by Liath 6
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GER-the
2007-04-18 05:38:16
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answer #7
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answered by Lee 7
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