Restore curly braces for translation protection in text; keep quotes only in titles
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@@ -34,7 +34,7 @@ The German possessives are:
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Again, the forms without final "e" are used before {der} and {das} nouns, while the forms with final "e" are used before {die} nouns.
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Also covered in this lesson is the German sound "ü", a rounded front vowel that may be unfamiliar. It can be both long and short.
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Also covered in this lesson is the German sound {ü}, a rounded front vowel that may be unfamiliar. It can be both long and short.
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$LESSON Section 2: Pronunciation
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$GRAMMAR Pronunciation: Long ü
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@@ -123,7 +123,7 @@ Notice the difference between words without and with the short ü sound:
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- {bitte} vs. {Bütte}
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### Articulation
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To produce the short ü, say a short "i" sound (as in {mit}). Keep your tongue in this position, but round your lips firmly. The combination of the short "i" tongue position with rounded lips produces the German short ü. Practice with the word {dünn}. Isolate the short ü sound and pronounce it a number of times by itself.
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To produce the short ü, say a short {i} sound (as in {mit}). Keep your tongue in this position, but round your lips firmly. The combination of the short {i} tongue position with rounded lips produces the German short ü. Practice with the word {dünn}. Isolate the short ü sound and pronounce it a number of times by itself.
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$DIALOGUE Repetition Drill - Short ü
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INSTRUCTION: Listen and repeat each word.
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