And don't forget the differences between the way Americans pronounce words
and English/Australians......I'm not being nasty, just very aware of the
differences after two years of listening to our church minister who came
from America only 2 years ago.   He often stops in the middle of the sermon
for an English-speaking lesson!!

Ruth
[email protected]


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
bev walker
Sent: Thursday, 23 April 2009 5:26 AM
To: A. González
Cc: Arachne
Subject: Re: [lace] Schneeberger Lace

Then I think you mean Sh-n-ehhhh-berger :)

short 'e' but drawn out ;)
eh, short, similar to 'huh', not eh as in ay -

ack, English as she is spoke :S

2009/4/22 A. Gonzalez <[email protected]>

> Hi Bev.
>
> The long  "e" from German doesn't exist in English. So it is difficult to
> explain... The sound is the "e" which you pronounce in "men" or "let." But
>

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