@TheOneWhoPlays
Seems you misunderstood me. I was speaking about standard German, and only mentioned the northern dialects as an example for dialects that do devoice. Though I've yet to hear any other dialect do that.
@KleinerGruenerKaktus
In fact, many of the central German dialects do the exact opposite, with pronouncing k as g for example. And as you'd expect, some people will do the same in standard German - yet nobody would claim that "Wecker", for example should be pronounced "Wegger".
Anyways, I guess I was wrong about the Duden being a reliable authority for German - even just searching for what the Aussprachewörterbuch says on Auslautverhärtung, the first result was duden.de claiming a final "ig" should always be pronounced as "ich". Not only would this conflict with the claim that German always devoices final g to k, it's also obviously wrong. Nobody would think Honig was pronounced Honich, for example.
...Want to bet somebody here will claim that all Germans do pronounce it like that, and just don't notice it?
https://www.duden.de/sprachwissen/sprachratgeber/Zweifelsfalle-bei-der-Aussprache
If even Duden gives conflicting information, I guess it's impossible to find any proven answer.
Seems you misunderstood me. I was speaking about standard German, and only mentioned the northern dialects as an example for dialects that do devoice. Though I've yet to hear any other dialect do that.
@KleinerGruenerKaktus
Not the case. You might want to re-read that sentence - it's about northern Germans pronouncing standard German words (with standardized spelling, I assume) different from everybody else. To put it simpler, it's about northerners not being able to speak properly.you've missed the "standarddeutsche" Part.
Does your idea of "far south" start at Köln? Because even up there, I've never heard people use final devoicing in regular (standard-German) conversation. Only in the far north (near the coast) and north east (Brandenburg, Berlin).The far southerners (Austria, parts of Bavaria, Switzerland and Südtirol) are the weird ones and outliers
In fact, many of the central German dialects do the exact opposite, with pronouncing k as g for example. And as you'd expect, some people will do the same in standard German - yet nobody would claim that "Wecker", for example should be pronounced "Wegger".
Funnily enough, it sounds like a g to me, and completely different from a k or ck. That's what I was referring to before. Perhaps it's a difference in hearing, like Japanese not being able to tell R from L (since they only use a sound that's in-between).click the sound button for weg you'll hear a /k/ sound at the end.
Anyways, I guess I was wrong about the Duden being a reliable authority for German - even just searching for what the Aussprachewörterbuch says on Auslautverhärtung, the first result was duden.de claiming a final "ig" should always be pronounced as "ich". Not only would this conflict with the claim that German always devoices final g to k, it's also obviously wrong. Nobody would think Honig was pronounced Honich, for example.
...Want to bet somebody here will claim that all Germans do pronounce it like that, and just don't notice it?
https://www.duden.de/sprachwissen/sprachratgeber/Zweifelsfalle-bei-der-Aussprache
If even Duden gives conflicting information, I guess it's impossible to find any proven answer.