-= Frank Black Forum =-
-= Frank Black Forum =-
Home | Profile | Register | Active Topics | Members | Search | FAQ
 All Forums
 Frank Black Chat
 General Frank Black Chat
 brood - pronunciation ??

Note: You must be registered in order to post a reply.
To register, click here. Registration is FREE!

Screensize:
UserName:
Password:
Format Mode:
Format: BoldItalicizedUnderlineStrikethrough Align LeftCenteredAlign Right Horizontal Rule Insert HyperlinkInsert EmailInsert Image Insert CodeInsert QuoteInsert List
   
Message:

* HTML is OFF
* Forum Code is ON
Smilies
Smile [:)] Big Smile [:D] Cool [8D] Blush [:I]
Tongue [:P] Evil [):] Wink [;)] Clown [:o)]
Black Eye [B)] Eight Ball [8] Frown [:(] Shy [8)]
Shocked [:0] Angry [:(!] Dead [xx(] Sleepy [|)]
Kisses [:X] Approve [^] Disapprove [V] Question [?]

 
   

T O P I C    R E V I E W
clemray Posted - 10/01/2007 : 16:04:50
is it pronounced Brote?

i wonder b/c that's what it sounds like in ACTCY. or is this poetic license?
20   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
Carl Posted - 10/06/2007 : 11:40:25
quote:
Originally posted by billgoodman

Just a bunch of internetgeeks with too much time on their hands


*ahem* yeah! Those geeks!

"In six months, she'll look like Grandma Moses!"
billgoodman Posted - 10/06/2007 : 05:17:55
Natuurlijk mag je dat, Carl!

The 'n' is not silent at all, but still nice try! Carica can act, if you ask me, IMDb: what do those guys know? Just a bunch of internetgeeks with too much time on their hands

---------------------------
BF: Mag ik Engels spreken?
Carl Posted - 10/05/2007 : 16:42:41
Carice Van Houten is rather lovely. Somebody was saying on IMDb message board that she can't act, I've only seen her in this but I thought she was very good. She's actually dating German actor Sebastian Koch who also stars in Zwartboek, and who was also in the excellent The Lives Of Others which I watched beforehand (went on a movie binge-had watched 300 earlier!).

I actually thought the n was usually silent in a lot of Dutch words ending in 'an'. Somehow, I think you'd know better than me Jop, hehe!! ;)

Mak ik Netherlands spreken?

"In six months, she'll look like Grandma Moses!"
billgoodman Posted - 10/05/2007 : 05:42:11
quote:
Originally posted by Carl

Watched Paul Verhoeven's Zwartboek (Black Book) last night, with subtitles of course, but Dutch must be one of the closest languages to English. I think the director's name is pronounced 'Powel Ferhova' in Holland!

"In six months, she'll look like Grandma Moses!"



still haven't seen it, what do you think of Carice van Houten, she has class if you ask me.

it's more like:
Powl Fer-who-van, but that's still not it.

---------------------------
BF: Mag ik Engels spreken?
kathryn Posted - 10/04/2007 : 16:09:09
quote:
Originally posted by billgoodman

I did try to teach you dutch on this board some years ago, remember?




You did. I am hopeless. This afternoon I met my kid's new soccer coach -- from outside Amsterdam. Lovely, lovely accent. It was a nice connection to make -- another Dutchman.


Happy hearts fall from my shaking hands

Carl Posted - 10/04/2007 : 13:24:39
Watched Paul Verhoeven's Zwartboek (Black Book) last night, with subtitles of course, but Dutch must be one of the closest languages to English. I think the director's name is pronounced 'Powel Ferhova' in Holland!

"In six months, she'll look like Grandma Moses!"
billgoodman Posted - 10/04/2007 : 12:29:28
I did try to teach you dutch on this board some years ago, remember?

---------------------------
BF: Mag ik Engels spreken?
kathryn Posted - 10/04/2007 : 06:04:30
quote:
Originally posted by Jefrey

I don't think native English speakers can pronounce Dutch properly. It's one of those things where past a certain age, you just can't learn it.





Growing up listening to a ton of Flemish and Dutch, I can say you are right. Much coughing and throat-clearing is involved in speaking those languages. Like ever heard a Dutch person correctly pronounce Vincent van gogh's last name? Hooo.


Happy hearts fall from my shaking hands

mr.biscuitdoughhead Posted - 10/03/2007 : 16:20:43
I thought it was pronounced like "blood".


"How do you like that, Sir Harold?
Daisy Girl Posted - 10/03/2007 : 16:16:54
quote:
Originally posted by coastline

I learned from billgoodman that it's pronounced "brote," and that the word means bread in Dutch. And I learned from Frank Black, in a radio interview, that the "English" version is pronounced "brewd." Which is also how Daisy Girl pronounced it on her own radio show.

That Brood means bread should explain the line in "Angels Come to Comfort You" where the angels are "whispering the name that rhymes with 'dead.' "


Please pardon me, for these my wrongs.



yeah, I definately wouldn't use my pronunciation as a guide. i butchered his name but really didn't know how to pronounce it correctly. now, i know how it sounds, but don't know how to duplicate it.

We're all obscure fans.- trobrianders
Jefrey Posted - 10/03/2007 : 14:27:46
I don't think native English speakers can pronounce Dutch properly. It's one of those things where past a certain age, you just can't learn it.

I work with a dude name Joost Bruining, and I can get his first name (phonetically it's like "yohst"), but I've tried pronouncing his last name a hundred times and can never get it right. It's got a sound that almost like gargling in it, like "bjroining" or something like that (think "fjord" but without the "o").


Qu'ils aillent se faire foutre <-- yeah, what he said.
kathryn Posted - 10/03/2007 : 05:47:48
That's high praise coming from you, Jop.

I'd like a link to a voice file of you pronouncing it, please. An fb.net tutorial, if you will.


Happy hearts fall from my shaking hands

billgoodman Posted - 10/03/2007 : 05:18:27
I almost forgot that BF says Herman Brood in the first sentence of Angels Come to comfort you.
He has a good pronunciation.

---------------------------
BF: Mag ik Engels spreken?
billgoodman Posted - 10/03/2007 : 05:15:51
Yes, but there's more too it
'Brood' rhymes with 'Dood'
which also means dead.



---------------------------
BF: Mag ik Engels spreken?
coastline Posted - 10/02/2007 : 20:17:46
I learned from billgoodman that it's pronounced "brote," and that the word means bread in Dutch. And I learned from Frank Black, in a radio interview, that the "English" version is pronounced "brewd." Which is also how Daisy Girl pronounced it on her own radio show.

That Brood means bread should explain the line in "Angels Come to Comfort You" where the angels are "whispering the name that rhymes with 'dead.' "


Please pardon me, for these my wrongs.
Mismatched Sasquatch Posted - 10/02/2007 : 19:24:51
quote:
Originally posted by Nate in the PDX

BF made a joke about this at the show last night



Arrrgghh!! West Coast shows, it's almost more than I can take...come East Frank! Must hear ingenious Bluefinger live
Daisy Girl Posted - 10/02/2007 : 18:04:26
very cool billgoodman. i heard it but i wouldn't know how to spell it phonetically.

bluefinger
billgoodman Posted - 10/02/2007 : 13:42:39
ok, easy one:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KfxMHMT0zFI

2:10 there a dutch tv-host says it

---------------------------
BF: Mag ik Engels spreken?
Nate in the PDX Posted - 10/02/2007 : 12:46:54
BF made a joke about this at the show last night, when he was talking about the inspiration for the record, pronouncing the name in a sort of anglicized fashion (rhyming with "German food") and then in a more or less authentic-sounding Dutch fashion, kind of like hair-mon brote.
Brank_Flack Posted - 10/01/2007 : 19:58:59
bro-den-heimer-frauden-ote

-= Frank Black Forum =- © 2002-2020 Frank Black Fans, Inc. Go To Top Of Page
Snitz Forums 2000