“Fischers Fritze” Tongue Twister
Fischers Fritze fischt frische Fische; Frische Fische fischt Fischers Fritze.
Translation: Fisher Fritz fishes fresh fish; fresh fish fishes Fisher Fritz.
Why Is It Hard?
This Zungenbrecher (tongue twister) is a masterclass in the German F and SCH combination. The word fischt (fishes) requires the tongue to move rapidly between the F stop and the SCH cluster, while frische adds the FR blend. The second line reverses the word order, forcing your brain to process the same sounds in a different sequence — doubling the difficulty.
History
Fischers Fritze is one of the oldest and most widely known German tongue twisters, appearing in children’s schoolbooks across German-speaking countries for over a century. It belongs to a tradition of Zungenbrecher designed to help children practise the F-sound, which does not exist in many other European languages. The name Fritz — a common German diminutive — and the fishing theme made it memorable and easy to visualise.
Tips for Saying It
- Slow down and say each word in isolation first: Fischers — Fritze — fischt — frische — Fische.
- Pay attention to the vowel shift between fischt and frische — both use the same consonants but different vowels.
- Once you can say the first line cleanly, the second line is the same words reversed — use that to your advantage.
More German Tongue Twisters
Discover more tongue twisters from around the world:
- German Tongue Twisters — the complete Zungenbrecher collection
- Streichholzschächtelchen — the hardest German tongue twister
- Hard Tongue Twisters — the most challenging twisters of all