Die beiden Finken (that's correct)
"ie" is always a long E inside a German syllable.
"ei" is always pronounced "eye" inside a German syllable, too.
A single "e" in an un-stressed German syllable is always pronounced like an un-stressed "a" in English.
"Finken" makes a rhyme with "Lincoln" (NOT "finkin").
So the title is pronounced "dee bied'n fink'n".
translation: "The two finches".
"beide" means "both".
Greetings from Germany
Dirk1961 6 months ago
Comment removed
Beautifullll *
Roobert33 6 months ago
Die beiden Finken (that's correct)
"ie" is always a long E inside a German syllable.
"ei" is always pronounced "eye" inside a German syllable, too.
A single "e" in an un-stressed German syllable is always pronounced like an un-stressed "a" in English.
"Finken" makes a rhyme with "Lincoln" (NOT "finkin").
So the title is pronounced "dee bied'n fink'n".
translation: "The two finches".
"beide" means "both".
Greetings from Germany
Dirk1961 6 months ago
Comment removed
Dirk1961 6 months ago
Beautifullll *
Roobert33 6 months ago