Sejr: sigh-er (In a more Danish accent it would be more 'sigh-uh') Lannerø: 'Lan' as in land. 'ner' like nau (like naught) 'ø' is a subject in itself. It's really a skandinavian specific letter. How to describe the sound? Uhm... kinda like the 'e' in 'the'. If you know French, there is the word 'deux' that has the sound. So it's Lan-nau-eux. (The r is really hard to hear so I'm skipping it.) Mark: It's basically like it is. In my accent, the r is very flat, almost British. So it's Mah-k. Hermansen: *gulp* A very audible H followed by 'ere' like 'there'. Man like tha English word, only a little more stunted. Like in the word 'semantics'. Sen is like the e is an ø. So it's like: 's-eux-n'.
So... Sigh-uh Lan-nau-eux Mah-k H-ere-man-s-eux-n
*faints* I think I'll make a little vid of me introducing him instead. This is complicated like hell.
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Date: 2009-11-10 03:32 pm (UTC)Sejr: sigh-er (In a more Danish accent it would be more 'sigh-uh')
Lannerø: 'Lan' as in land. 'ner' like nau (like naught) 'ø' is a subject in itself. It's really a skandinavian specific letter. How to describe the sound? Uhm... kinda like the 'e' in 'the'. If you know French, there is the word 'deux' that has the sound.
So it's Lan-nau-eux. (The r is really hard to hear so I'm skipping it.)
Mark: It's basically like it is. In my accent, the r is very flat, almost British. So it's Mah-k.
Hermansen: *gulp* A very audible H followed by 'ere' like 'there'. Man like tha English word, only a little more stunted. Like in the word 'semantics'. Sen is like the e is an ø. So it's like: 's-eux-n'.
So...
Sigh-uh
Lan-nau-eux
Mah-k
H-ere-man-s-eux-n
*faints* I think I'll make a little vid of me introducing him instead. This is complicated like hell.