40 Colors
2025-07-17 28 min Susanne Schilk-Blümel
Description & Show Notes
In this episode of Better German teaches listeners the German words for basic colors. She shares updates about her teaching, new online courses, and the free Better German community. Susi provides a clear, repeat-after-me pronunciation guide for a range of color words, tips for memorizing and practicing vocabulary, and practical exercises to help learners integrate these new words into everyday use. Bonus resources, including a handy printable PDF with color vocabulary, are available in the Better German community which is completely free to sign up.
If you’d like to see what this approach looks like in action and understand why German feels unnecessarily hard for so many learners, join my free live workshop “How to Actually Learn German.” I’ll walk you through what usually goes wrong — and what actually makes progress possible. https://bettergerman.info/workshop
If you’d like to see what this approach looks like in action and understand why German feels unnecessarily hard for so many learners, join my free live workshop “How to Actually Learn German.” I’ll walk you through what usually goes wrong — and what actually makes progress possible. https://bettergerman.info/workshop
Get the PDF mentioned in the episode in the Better German Community - it is free. You will find a regularly growing list of resources there. You can connect with other learners , take part in regular free lessons, and ask questions and get them answered there! So all our courses are delivered inside the community.
Want a learning plan that actually fits you?🤔
Start with a free appointment . I'll take a look at your goals and level, and we'll walk through your first personalized lesson together.
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Summary
In this episode of Better German, host Susi Blumel returns to teach listeners the German words for basic colors. She shares updates about her teaching, new online courses, and the free Better German community. Susi provides a clear, repeat-after-me pronunciation guide for a range of color words, tips for memorizing and practicing vocabulary, and practical exercises to help learners integrate these new words into everyday use. Bonus resources, including a handy printable PDF with color vocabulary, are available in the Better German community.
Introduction
Welcome back to the Better German Podcast! In today's episode, host Susi Blumel brings you a fresh, interactive lesson all about colors in German. Susi shares some behind-the-scenes updates about the podcast, exciting plans for upcoming courses, and tips on how you can make your German learning journey even more effective—right from your own home. Get ready to practice German color vocabulary, learn helpful pronunciation tips, and discover practical ways to master new words through sentences and repetition. Whether you're a total beginner or looking to brush up on the basics, this episode is packed with simple, clear explanations and plenty of encouragement to help you learn German better, one color at a time.
Key Topics 🔎- Learning Colors, Making Sentences in German
Want a learning plan that actually fits you?🤔
Start with a free appointment . I'll take a look at your goals and level, and we'll walk through your first personalized lesson together.
Ready to really get started on learning German?
Live courses are starting soon. Check them out here.
Summary
In this episode of Better German, host Susi Blumel returns to teach listeners the German words for basic colors. She shares updates about her teaching, new online courses, and the free Better German community. Susi provides a clear, repeat-after-me pronunciation guide for a range of color words, tips for memorizing and practicing vocabulary, and practical exercises to help learners integrate these new words into everyday use. Bonus resources, including a handy printable PDF with color vocabulary, are available in the Better German community.
Introduction
Welcome back to the Better German Podcast! In today's episode, host Susi Blumel brings you a fresh, interactive lesson all about colors in German. Susi shares some behind-the-scenes updates about the podcast, exciting plans for upcoming courses, and tips on how you can make your German learning journey even more effective—right from your own home. Get ready to practice German color vocabulary, learn helpful pronunciation tips, and discover practical ways to master new words through sentences and repetition. Whether you're a total beginner or looking to brush up on the basics, this episode is packed with simple, clear explanations and plenty of encouragement to help you learn German better, one color at a time.
Key Topics 🔎- Learning Colors, Making Sentences in German
• Why podcast episodes have been irregular—and what’s changing going forward
• Behind-the-scenes updates: new assistant, new teachers, new courses launching in September
• Why podcasts alone aren’t enough—and how to use them effectively for real learning
• The power of making your own sentences (not just listening!) to learn vocab deeply
• Overcoming the “I don’t know what to say” block when generating sentences
• Interactive vs. passive learning—and how to stay engaged even without a teacher
• Learn essential German color vocabulary (with pronunciation tips and regional variations)
• Practice ideas:
▫️ Repeating words out loud
▫️ Using “Das ist...” and simple full sentences
▫️ Partner Q&A: “Ist das Buch grün?” – “Ja, das Buch ist grün.”
• Bonus: Get the free worksheet in the Better German community
• Final word: Join the community, leave a review, and let’s learn together!
• Behind-the-scenes updates: new assistant, new teachers, new courses launching in September
• Why podcasts alone aren’t enough—and how to use them effectively for real learning
• The power of making your own sentences (not just listening!) to learn vocab deeply
• Overcoming the “I don’t know what to say” block when generating sentences
• Interactive vs. passive learning—and how to stay engaged even without a teacher
• Learn essential German color vocabulary (with pronunciation tips and regional variations)
• Practice ideas:
▫️ Repeating words out loud
▫️ Using “Das ist...” and simple full sentences
▫️ Partner Q&A: “Ist das Buch grün?” – “Ja, das Buch ist grün.”
• Bonus: Get the free worksheet in the Better German community
• Final word: Join the community, leave a review, and let’s learn together!
Related Episodes
Episode 1: Introduction to Better German
Episode 4: How to Learn German
Episode 5: Introduction to Articles
Episode 4: How to Learn German
Episode 5: Introduction to Articles
Episode 6: Wordlist Body Parts
Episode 39: Restart and Conversation
Other Resources📚
- Check out this Interactive German Movie Guide with suitable TV shows and movies with subtitles in your language, so you can start using movies to learn right away! Watching German movies and TV shows is great to help you learn German.
- Listen to All The Episodes Published So Far!
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Transcript
Welcome to the Better German podcast.
I am Susi Blümel, a German teacher
and founder of Better German.
This podcast helps to learn
German in a simple and clear way.
With useful words, clear sentence
structures, pronunciation, and real
life topics from daily life and culture.
You'll also get tips for learning
German and understanding how
the language actually works.
And when you're ready, we have
a free community and courses
to support you even more.
Hello, I am so glad to be back, seriously.
I don't know when you are
going to hear this episode.
I started the podcast a while ago,
and then there was a break, and then I
was like, yes, now I'm restarting, and
then some other things happened that
I didn't foresee, but now I'm back.
I'm recording a whole bunch of episodes
now and things are set up much better.
A lot has changed.
I've done a lot behind the scenes that I'm
going to tell you about a little bit also.
but first this episode is
going to be about colors.
So this is a kind of basic episode.
We've done a lot of other
things, so this is one of the
actual teaching episodes again.
So let me talk to you a little bit.
By the way, it's summer, but it's
actually cooler now in Vienna, so I
don't have my AC running and I, I'm like,
okay, I'm going to use this opportunity
to record a couple of things because
the recording is not as nice when I
have the AC running, to be honest.
So I'm taking this as an opportunity, so.
I have to sincerely apologize
if you are a regular listener.
I want to sincerely apologize that
I've made you wait for such a long
time for new episodes, and I really,
really don't want to do that anymore
because I keep thinking of my podcast
and I really, really enjoy doing it.
So I will continue to do that.
However.
so you have a little bit more of an
understanding what's been going on.
It's not that I was just lazy,
and it's not honestly that just
other things happen in my life.
I've been working a lot on
how, like, where is the journey
going to be of better German?
Because as you may know, maybe if
you've been following my podcast,
I really want to have a complete
solution, so I want to be able.
To really help any German
learner pretty much anywhere.
So in the long run.
There is a lot more to do
what I have to do here.
But, uh, the next step that I've
been working on, first of all, I
have an assistant and she's helping
a lot in making, finishing episodes
and promotion and so on, and that
is freeing me up a little bit.
I'm also training another teacher
and there is a second one coming and.
This is big drum roll
because we will have.
courses starting in September.
So I've had Grünup German
learning for a while.
but this was a little different.
And now we will have actual a level one
course, for example, a beginner's course.
And this is going to be up to,
I don't know, maybe 15 people.
It's going to be relatively
small Grünups online.
And, we are all going to
go through the same thing.
And this is.
Going to be perfect because you'll
get all the explanations you need
from me, but all my students also get
enough practice and guided practice,
and they will know exactly what to do.
So this is something the, the podcast
obviously cannot fully provide.
Like I've had a student the other day,
actually that was in a free lesson as
part of the Better German community,
which also exists, by the way.
There is the Better German community
and it's completely free now.
And, she said, yeah, she's been
listening to the episode, to the
episodes, to the podcast, but it's
not, what was the word she was using?
I forgot the word she was using,
but basically she was like, okay.
I mean, it's only, I'm only listening.
And yes, that is true.
So first of all, when you're listening
to the podcast, I highly recommend to
you if you want to get more out of it,
you can do it two ways or three ways.
You can, first of all, use
it to refresh and stuff.
You can also use it to get to know me.
And if you decide, oh yeah,
"I think I like the way she's
teaching, I'm going to do a course."
Then obviously you're more than welcome.
Or you can actually use it a
lot by yourself, but you still
have to do the actual exercises.
And obviously I cannot sit you together
with another student and tell you,
"Okay, now make another sentence."
And.
If I hear that you're pronouncing
it, maybe not 100%, then
make you repeat it again.
So obviously that is something
that I cannot do on a podcast.
However, you technically
can do that by yourself.
Probably I have a little more
experience, but you can totally do
that by yourself, and I'm always going
to give you some hints how you can
practice these words for yourself.
So because this is going.
To be the big difference.
For example, I think the, the one
sentence that probably helps my
students the most, like if I was going
to pick one sentence that I say and
I say a lot that helps my students
the most, it's probably the sentence.
Make another sentence because
when we are learning new words and
learning new words is like a big
part of learning a language and it's,
it should never be any different.
No matter the level, you should
always make it a point that
you have to learn new words.
I mean, okay, if you want to learn German
to just get around when you're doing
a holiday in a German-speaking country,
or you meet somebody who speaks German
somewhere and you just want to be able
to converse with him and order food and
say things like where you're coming from
and, and stuff like that, then you will
probably be very, very fine with learning
3000 words and honestly, you need some
grammar of course, because otherwise
there's a lot of things that you will be
missing and other people will like missing
in the, in the sense of not understanding
and other people will not understand you
maybe, but it's also not, it's limited.
But if you want to actually learn a
language and really be able to have
some meaningful conversations or
live in a German-speaking country
or read books and really get them.
Like we have a lot of
great literature in German.
Then you need to always focus on
learning more words, not just grammar.
I just wanted to point it out.
So, and when you are learning new
words, however you are learning them.
I mean you, when you're learning
them with me, you like, we clear what
it means, we go through the list.
We do a lot of repetition, repetition
until you have the pronunciation and
then, actually, then starts the real work.
Like now you understand it.
Maybe you will, you might remember it when
you hear it, but in order, at least for a
while, but in order to really understand
the word and really be able to use the
word, it's like people also sometimes
use the, the thing like, retaining the
word, you have to practice this word now.
And the way how we do this,
is by making sentences mostly.
Sometimes we have like sentence
patterns and we practice it with that,
particularly when you're a beginner.
But when you're a little bit
more advanced, I'll have a Word
List and then it's super simple.
It's just like, okay, we have these
twin words or whatever, and now
we're going to use them in sentences.
You can even do that in your
own language when you learn a
new word in your own language.
But that's and— you have to make sentences
until you can easily use that word.
And that is harder
sometimes than you think.
It is Even harder, of course, if
you're doing a foreign language.
It in a foreign language.
But even if it's in your own
language, this could be hard.
And then people are telling me,
my students are telling me, that's
a sentence I have, I hear a lot.
"I don't have so much imagination."
Well, good news is it has nothing
to do with your imagination.
It's a natural thing.
If you have a new word and you
don't know that word yet and that
meaning is not familiar to you,
it could be hard even without the
fact that it's a foreign language.
So I usually, my student will make
a sentence and then he's like,
"Can we go to the next word?"
And I will say,
"No, please make another sentence."
"Mach noch einen Satz," in German,
and that probably is the most helpful
thing I said because I can tell you
also another story from a lady that I
have actually, I was teaching her son.
I was teaching her sons English, and
also I was tutoring them on some other
subjects and her English was not good.
Like in the beginning, she, she
would not talk to me at all because
she didn't speak English actually.
And then she told me,
"Okay, I want to, like I have relatives
that I'm meeting for the first time
and they will come here and they speak
English. Can you gi-," actually her son
was translating that to me and he's like,
"Can you give me some lessons
so I can talk to them?"
And I'm like, I'm not a miracle worker.
I cannot make her speak
English in two lessons.
But anyway, I mean, I'm not going
to send somebody away because
of that, particularly because
she was a student or a custom.
Anyway, so what we did for a couple
of hours, we just did some very, like
basically the beginning of my Level
one course in, in English, it's similar
to one German and, all we were doing
at the end was making some very basic
sentences with basic words, like family,
that seemed appropriate in this case.
And it didn't matter that her
sentences weren't perfect, but
they were English sentences.
She had learned some, but she just didn't
dare speaking, and that happens a lot.
And that alone can make it go
away but, I'm telling you— ah!
I know what the word now was
that my student was using, that
the podcast is not interactive.
And I'm telling you to some degree,
the interactiveness is not only helpful
because how you learn these words,
whatever words they are, is you make up
the sentence, not necessarily me prompting
you to it or, something like that.
I mean, very often when we
practice, sentence patterns, but
that's about Sentence Pattern.
That's about, about the
correctness of sentences.
We do question and answers, but when you
learn new words, it's like you think of
what to do with the word and that is how
you learn, and that is super effective.
And it is a little hard.
It's not really hard.
It means like you're sitting there
and you are thinking, and maybe you
have to think for half a minute until
you can come up with a sentence.
Also, don't make it too
complicated, necessarily.
Can be easy sentences.
Okay, so that was a little
bit of a long discourse.
Let's actually start getting
into the subject of the
episode and we're doing colors.
Um, how are we going to do that?
I think it's the easiest way.
you can, by the way, let me know in
the comments or send me a message.
If you find this new way, how, I'm going
to do the Word List a little better.
So what I'm going to do is I'm
going to say the English word,
you can, can repeat the English
word because it still helps you.
It could help you to, to remember
the German word better if you
have the English word ahead of it.
And then I'm going to say the German word,
and I want you to repeat every word I say.
Yes.
So by the way, if you're
interested, there is a. I'm not
going to call it a worksheet.
That's too much.
It's just a PDF.
It's just a PDF with the English
words and the German words.
And the colors actually.
So you can see that and you can get that.
It's part of the, it's in
the, in my free community.
It's completely free.
And you'll find it there and
you'll actually find even more.
Color resources in there
and other resources.
It's like there's res, like you
find everything about the podcast
in there and a lot of other things.
So I'm going to link it also,
but it's also very easy.
You can go to better
german.info/community.
So if you haven't signed up,
just do that and then find the
worksheet or the PDF right there.
So, I'm going to say the English
word and then the German word, and
you're going to, and I'm going to
just say the German word twice, and I
want you to repeat everything I say.
"Colors,"
—"Farben,
Farben"
"blue,"—
"Blau,
Blau"
"green"
—"Grün, Grün."
Now sometimes, German-speaking
people will not actually say "Grün,"
but maybe more like "Grün," so the
R doesn't necessarily get rolled.
Like rrrr, but we probably will just
say it once, like r, like "Grün."
"red"— "Rot,
Rot"
"yellow"
—"Gelb, Gelb."
"brown,"
—"Brown,
Brown"
"orange"
—"Orange."
Now "Orange" is actually technically
the French way of saying it, and most
people in Austria will say that Maybe you
could also hear something like "Orange."
I don't want to make you repeat it because
I don't think it's nice, but anyway.
Just so you know, "Orange" is
also something you could hear,
"white" —"Weiß,
Weiß."
"Black"
—"Schwarz,
Schwarz."
That could be a little
tricky for you maybe.
So I'm going to say it
again and you repeat it.
"Schwarz."
Also, sometimes Austrian and
German, like German-speaking people.
We will, in this case, just not say
the R. There is an R in this letter.
You spell it, the whole word
black is spelled S-C-H-W-A-R-Z.
So there's an r at the very end,
or the, second to last word.
And very often we'll just leave it out.
Not really leave it out, but basically
make the, "a" the letter before longer.
So that would be "Schwaaarz." So the
really proper way of saying it would
be "SchwaRz" and the not bad way of
saying it, but the usual way you will
hear many people say it, particularly
a little more down in the south of
Germany and in Austria will be "Schwarz,
SchwaRz, or Schwarz." You pick one.
"Grey" —"Grau,
Grau."
"purple, or violet." There's
different ways of saying that.
So there one word and that is more for
a, a color that goes is kind of dark and
it goes more into the blue is "Violett.
"Violett" and another way of saying it,
and it's could also be used for stuff that
is more going into the pink direction.
"Lila, Lila."
Next word.
"pink" —"Rosa,
rosa."
And now, funny thing.
So if you have a hot pink, so like an
intensive pink that goes kind of like
in towards the red, like think maybe
in more intensive than Barbie, like
magenta, we call that in German, "Pink."
But that's really just for
the super intensive stuff.
Not kind of like the typical
girl baby color pink.
That would be "Rosa." So,
"hot pink," —"Pink,
Pink."
And then I'm giving you one more.
And that's "turquoise," "Türkis,
Türkis."
All right, so the PDF actually
has more colors, so go to
bettergerman.info/community and there
you find this and all other resources for
the podcast cast in a separate section.
You find it on the left if you,
if you have the, the app it's on.
Probably on the bottom, on the resources.
And then there is even, yeah, on
the, on the bottom, on the resources,
and the first section of resources
is the German podcast resources.
So you can find that there.
And actually, but it's not
in the podcast resources.
I'm actually going to add that
to the podcast resource section.
I have more worksheets about colors.
I'm going to link those there too.
So, because I once had an an, actually
an English student of mine, and he was
an interior architect, interior designer
in German, we call it, "Innenarchitekt"
and he wanted to know things more.
Like he wanted to know, okay, what's ivory
and what's eggshell, and stuff like that.
So I actually made a list and I'm
going to link that there if that's
something you're interested in.
So the one thing that I did promise
to you is I'm going to, tell
you how you can practice this.
First of all, if you are a beginner, and
this is the first time you're actually
hearing colors, I would suggest to you
to go back to the section where we start
the colors and listen and repeat again.
Um, if you don't have any direct
feedback on how you're saying something.
The, the way how you can handle that
is you just do it more often because
you will get it right eventually.
Even the, the funny letters, like
the "ooh" and the sounds that are
probably not familiar to you depending
on your native language, you will
get them right eventually, but, um,
you kind of can replace the fact
that you don't have a feedback with,
"Okay, I'm just going
to say it more often."
Just keep trying it.
That's how kids learn it eventually.
They just keep saying it and then
eventually they get it right and
they're not always corrected.
You know when when you have a kid and it
starts saying a word for the first time,
you're usually very happy that you figure
out what he wants to say, even if it's
not correct, and eventually by saying it
again and again, you, they get it correct.
And that's the same for you.
However, that being said, of
course you do learn it faster
if you have direct feedback.
So if you want that, you could, come
either to one of the free lessons that
we offer every now and then in the Better
German community or sign up for a course.
But how you can practice these other
than the pronunciation, just keep
saying it and that will be fine.
And then you can do very easy things.
You can just point to
things and say the color.
That's the easiest version.
If you want to take it a little
further, what you do is you can say,
"Das ist mmh mmh mmh."
That means, "That is."
You can say "Das ist Rot" and point
to something red or even touch it on.
And then "Das ist Grün"
and "Das ist Weiß."
But I highly suggest to you to
actually look and point at the
color because otherwise you really
just practice the pronunciation.
So, point at the thing or show, touch it
and say "das ist," and then the color.
And then if you have a few more
words, you can also use it.
You can actually use a lot of the words
that we learned early in the podcast
or any other words that you know,
and you say that word and the color.
If you want to say, "The table is white.
"Der Tisch ist
Weiß."
"Das Fenster ist Schwarz."
"The window is black," that's what it is.
"Das Fenster ist Schwarz."
Or, "Das Buch ist Grün."
"The book is green."
So this is a perfect way of, of,
practicing that, and I'm going to
give you one last tip on how you
can practice this particular one.
If you have a second person to do
that with, you can ask questions.
You can say,
"Is the book green?"
And then, "Yes, the book is green"
or "No, the book isn't green."
So that would, "Ist das Buch Grün?"
"Ja, das Buch ist Grün."
So, one person asks the other one answers.
So these are some ideas on
how you can practice that.
I hope you enjoyed this episode
and I am going to hear you.
No, not, I'm going to hear you.
I would love to hear from you.
So if there is any feedback,
um, you can always write to me.
If you like the podcast, then I'm
very, I would very much appreciate
if you give it a, a five star
review and if you want to write
something in addition, then go ahead.
That, that would make my day
and, hope you are going like,
tune in soon and see you later.