GERMAN ALPHABET.

Outside of Germany, there is perhaps no country in which German printing is so extensively carried on as in the United States. We present a table of German characters, with their names, and their corresponding forms in English.

German Form.English Form.German Name.
AaAaah
BbBbbay
CcCctsay
DdDdday
EeEea
Ff ffFf ffef, ef-ef
GgGggay
Hh chHh chhah, tsay-hah
IiIie
JjJjyot
Kk ckKk ckkah, tsay-kah
LlLlel
MmMmem
NnNnen
OoOoo
PpPppay
QqQqkoo
RrRrer
Sſ s ſſSs s sses, es-es
ſz ſtszes-tset, es-tay
TtTttay
UuUuoo
VvVvfōw
WwWwvay
XxXxiks
YyYyipsilon
Zz tzZz tztset, tay-tset
ä ë üä ö ü or æ œ ue

Several of the German letters, being somewhat similar in appearance, are liable to be mistaken one for another. To aid the learner, we give such letters together, and point out the difference.

B (B) and V (V).

The latter is open in the middle, the former joined across.

C (C) and E (E).

E (E) has a little stroke in the middle, projecting to the right, which C (C) has not.

G (G) and S (S).

S (S) has an opening above, G (G) is closed, and has besides a perpendicular stroke within.

K (K), N (N), R (R).

K (K) is rounded at the top, N (N) is open in the middle, R (R) is united about the middle.

M (M) and W (W).

M (M) is opened at the bottom, W (W) is closed.

b (b) and h (h).

b (b) is entirely closed below, h (h) is somewhat open, and ends at the bottom, on one side, with a projecting hair-stroke.

f (f) and ſ (s).

f (f) has a horizontal line through it, ſ (s) on the left side only.

m (m) and w (w).

m (m) is entirely open at the bottom, w (w) is partly closed.

r (r) and x (x).

x (x) has a little hair-stroke below, on the left.

v (v) and y (y).

v (v) is closed, y (y) is somewhat open below, and ends with a hair-stroke.

GERMAN UPPER CASE.

GERMAN LOWER CASE.