German CH Sound — ich-Laut (ç) vs ach-Laut (x)
Learn both German CH sounds: the soft ich-Laut /ç/ and the rough ach-Laut /x/. When to use each one, with practice words.
EXAMPLE WORDS
COMMON MISTAKES
- Using /ʃ/ (sh) instead of /ç/ — 'ich' becomes 'ish'
- Using /k/ instead of /x/ — 'acht' becomes 'akt'
- Not distinguishing ich-Laut from ach-Laut
MOST CHALLENGING FOR
STEP-BY-STEP PRACTICE
ç ç ç
/ç/
Like a soft 'sh' but with your tongue raised toward the hard palate. Think of a cat hissing gently.
x x x
/x/
Like clearing your throat gently. The friction is at the back of the mouth, near the soft palate.
ich
/ɪç/
After front vowels (i, e, ü, ö) use the soft ich-Laut.
acht
/axt/
After back vowels (a, o, u) use the rough ach-Laut.
Kirche — Kuchen
/ˈkɪʁçə / ˈkuːxn̩/
'Kirche' has the soft CH (after front vowel). 'Kuchen' has the rough CH (after back vowel).
Mädchen
/ˈmɛːtçən/
Soft CH after the front vowel — gentle friction.
Ich mache leicht einen Kuchen
/ɪç ˈmaxə laɪ̯çt ˈaɪ̯nən ˈkuːxn̩/
Mix of both CH types — listen to where each one falls.
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