Thank you so much for the closed captions cause without them it would no use of us to watch it if we don´t know the language. The subtitles help us try and identify the more clearly recognizable Germanic cognates! I just wish they had chosen a more phonetic spelling to help us recognize the spoken words more easily.
Funnily, with the captions and hearing the words I can make out a good deal (native German speaker, plus learned Dutch, which I think I found a cognate or two that is not shared with German). But definitely need both the text and the pronunciation to understand that much!
@@timetraveler2405 Indeed, I would never ever equate the two terms, but I've seen some people supporting spurious ideologies trying to push that fallacy even about Frisian, which is utterly preposterous.
@@helengreen9507 Never, it´s a sister language, as English, Frisian, Danish or any other Germanic language is but not a dialect of German. culture.pl/en/article/central-europes-most-mysterious-language en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wymysorys_language
I know only foxish :c Fun fact: "Foks" is apparently a common last name in Wilamowice area, a relic of the presence of Scottish people here in the past :D