Which of the following words contain the Ich-Laut (a voiceless palatal fricative, IPA [ç]) and which contain the Ach-laut (a voiceless velar fricative, IPA [x])?
- gebrochen "broken"
- Eulchen "Owlet"
- die Furcht "fear"
- die Fracht "cargo"
- der Chaot/die Chaotin "spazz, slob"
- chemisch "chemical"
- der Fenchel "fennel"
- die Küche "kitchen"
- feuchtkalt "clammy"
- die Chefin/der Chef "boss"
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(is 5 at all related to "chaos"?)
I seriously need to just break down and take a class.
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1. gebrochen Remember, it's the quality of the preceding vowel that's important. That vowel is /o:/ (a back vowel), so the <ch> is backed as well--[x].
3. Furcht Consonants are almost always followed by Ich-Laut. Offhand, I can't think of a single instance of /rx/.
5. Chaot You're right, this is a derivative of das Chaos "chaos". I've only ever heard this with /k/, never /ç/ (and certainly not [x]).
6. chemisch The second <ch> is neither Ich-Laut or Ach-Laut; it's part of the trigraph <sch> which nearly always represents [ʃ]. (The only exceptions that come to mind are nouns ending in <s> followed by the diminutive suffix -chen, e.g. das Gläschen "small glass, 'wee drink'". This would be normatively pronounced ['glɛ:sçən], but you'd be understood if you said ['glɛ:ʃən].) die Chemie shows the same variation as China, so both /ç/ and /k/ would be acceptable in chemisch.
10. Chefin Another trick question: This is a recent borrowing from French and is pronounced as if spelled *Scheffin, i.e. ['ʃɛfɪn].
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Heh... I was thinking that I've heard "Furcht" with /rx/ - but that was with a regional accent that most likely had no [ç] at all.
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