Also an interesting note, i'm not sure but we were taught that standard German(not any regional dialects) have replaced the B looking letter with two s's.
You mean ß - in most cases, it has been replaced by double s, but not everywhere. I think that ß is still written after long vowels (like in Straße, Maß). This reformed spelling has been introduced only a few years ago, so I'm not too safe on it yet.
One thing, to all English speakers: There
is a difference between "burg" and "berg" in city names. Most people simply write "burg". It's wrong. For instance, the city is named Nuremb
erg. I know it's a bit confusing because there is also "burg" in city names, like in Regensburg. There is no rule to this; "Burg" means "castle" and "Berg" means "mountain". But if you write the name in the way it is written down in a book or on a map, it is most probably right.
In German, "i" is pronounced like the English "e". To get the English "i" sound, you write "ei". To get the normal German "e" sound, pronounce the short English "e" like in "get", but try to stretch it.
Some funnies:
"become" and "bekommen" mean two different things. So do "eventually" and "eventuell", "also" and "also", "gift" and "Gift", and, of course, "die" and "die".
"Die" can either be the feminine form of "the" or be a plural article. In that case, "that girl" means "das Mädchen" and "these girls" means "die Mädchen", whereas "that woman" means "die Frau" and "these women" means "die Frauen".
It's "das Mädchen" but "der Junge" (the boy).
Sometimes, singular and plural don't differ at all:
"Ein Kanadier", "viele Kanadier" (one Canadian, many Canadians).
Oh yeah, the English k-sounding "c" is written "k" for those who haven't noticed.
If you pronounce the English "v", you get the German "w", in all cases. When pronouncing "w" as standalone, it is pronounced like the English "v" -Germans have no use for "double-u". "v" is pronounced like an f, and as stand-alone pronounced "fau". It's pretty much a superflous letter. There are only a few cases in which "v" is pronounced like an English "v".
German "au" is not pronounced like English "au". It's more like English "ou".
German accent is the most sinister and evil-sounding thing in the world. Observe:
Tshermen exsent iss ze most ssinisster end eevill-sounding sing in ze vorld.
Thinking about it, German is almost as difficult as French.