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The Polish Language (Is this real?!) 

Langfocus
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This video is all about the Polish language, including its history and linguistic features!
Learning Polish? Click the link to get a free account at Polishpod101: bit.ly/Polishpod101.
(Disclosure: If you upgrade to a premium plan, Langfocus receives a small referral fee that helps support this channel).
Special thanks to Sebastian Marcin Siwik for help with the Polish audio recordings for this video.
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Sources include:
Polish in Three Months by Danusia Stok.
Teach Yourself Polish by Nigel Gotteri, Johanna Michalak-Gray.
Polish--an Essential Grammar by Dana Bielec.
Music:
“Clobber” by Silent Partner.
“Time Illusionist” by Asher Fulero.
The following images are used under Creative Commons Sharealike license:
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi... by Poznaniak, Waćpan
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi... by radek.s
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi... by Wisielic.97
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi... by Aotearoa
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi... - author not listed
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi... by Halibut, Sneecs
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi... - German federal archive
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi... - German Federal Archive
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
Still images which contain the above images are offered for use under CC Sharealike license.

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29 июн 2019

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Комментарии : 18 тыс.   
@Langfocus
@Langfocus 4 года назад
Hi everyone! If you're currently learning Polish, visit PolishPod101 ( bit.ly/Polishpod101 ) for a HUGE collection of audio/video lessons for students of all levels. I'm an active member on several Pod101 sites, and I hope you'll enjoy them as much as I do! A free account gives you access to lots of content, and then if you want their entire library you can upgrade to a paid plan. For 33 other languages, check out my review! langfocus.com/innovative-language-podcasts/ (Full disclosure: if you upgrade to a paid plan, Langfocus receives a small referral fee. But if I didn't like it, I wouldn't recommend it, and the free account is pretty good on its own!) *** A couple of notes about this video. In the video I said that Polish is the most linguistically homogeneous country in Europe, as it is reported in some sources. But there are other countries including Hungary and Greece that may be more linguistically homogeneous (Hungary at 98.9%, and Greece at 99%). I looked at some documents from the Polish Central Statistics Office and got these stats: 96.2% of people in Poland use only Polish at home. Another 2% use both Polish and another language at home, making it 98.2%. And if we include speakers of Silesian who only speak Silesian at home, it's 98.5%. So it's among the most homogeneous, but it doesn't seem to be #1. Another thing, in the video I said that Z is the most common letter in Polish, but it's only the most common consonant. There are several vowels that occur more frequently than any consonant. There's a typo @12:00 - the singular dative of matka is matce, not matke. @12:14 - the masculine personal plural nominative of "młody" is "młodzi", not "młodi". And
@alexanderhanooman
@alexanderhanooman 4 года назад
You're forgiven, you reignited my wanting to learn Polish. But I always thought of polish as a Germanic language. So thanks for correcting my thinking!
@Robertoslaw.Iksinski
@Robertoslaw.Iksinski 4 года назад
Although in 12:14 "młodi" as "młodzi" in the masculine personal plural nominative (which is used also as "młody" in the masculine personal singular nominative) is not a typo in Poland, because it's very correct Kashubian, which in Poland is not a foreign language :)
@zdzislawmeglicki2262
@zdzislawmeglicki2262 4 года назад
Another curious feature of Polish is that it's got... five genders! Yes, there are three masculine genders, feminine and neuter. The masculine genders, human, animate, and inanimate, differ subtly, but they differ nevertheless. This is best seen when declining the nouns in combination with adjectives. How I ever managed to master the language is beyond me. Today, I find it fantastically complicated.
@alexanderhanooman
@alexanderhanooman 4 года назад
@@zdzislawmeglicki2262 so polish was not your mother tongue, but can I as, what was your motivation factor? For learning Polish and are you a native English speaker?
@mariuszwarchulski5393
@mariuszwarchulski5393 4 года назад
Hello Paul, don't worry about some critical comments, maybe some people are surprised that "z" is the most common in Poland. The video is very professional and very educational even for the Pole, we just don't focus on these all aspects and word endings which is obvious. Thank you for your effort
@magorzataszymik7682
@magorzataszymik7682 4 года назад
Ten dziwny moment, gdy jako Polak oglądasz film o języku polskim w języku angielskim...
@paweln2033
@paweln2033 4 года назад
i se uświadamiasz że nasz język jest zdrowo popieprzony
@szaggy2k
@szaggy2k 4 года назад
Wbrew pozorom, jak się ogląda ten film to można odnieść wrażenie że naszego języka jednak nie zaprojektował jakiś alkoholik z wadą wymowy
@samsonpl1110
@samsonpl1110 4 года назад
Jest trudniejszy od wielu na świecie ale da się go nauczyć. Może nie bardzo dobrze ale dość by dało się komunikować :D
@jandron8519
@jandron8519 4 года назад
... i uczysz się więcej niż w szkole
@kyanbasu
@kyanbasu 4 года назад
tak było
@atenanoktua7220
@atenanoktua7220 4 года назад
Profesor filologii polskiej na wykładzie: - Jak Państwo wiecie w językach słowiańskich jest nie tylko pojedyncze zaprzeczenie. Jest też podwójne zaprzeczenie. A nawet podwójne zaprzeczenie jako potwierdzenie. Nie ma natomiast podwójnego potwierdzenia jako zaprzeczenia. Na to student z ostatniej ławki: - Dobra, dobra.
@clintjones6966
@clintjones6966 4 года назад
Yeah, right...
@matez9133
@matez9133 4 года назад
eee dobre
@himmla5459
@himmla5459 4 года назад
A helping hand: Polish filology professor on lecture: -As you know, there is not only single negation in Slavic languages. There is double negation too. (when you combine can't + never it's still a negation in Polish). Even double negation as affirmation. (this is more difficult; if someone asks: Didn't you drink last night?, you answer: No, I didn't drink, so you double negate to say yes and it works in Polish XD). But there's no double affirmation working as negation. Student sitting in last bench: yeah, yeah (said, of course, in sarcastic manner)
@ddsferd1628
@ddsferd1628 4 года назад
@@himmla5459 thank you for the translate. My native Russian couldn't help me.
@TheOstry322
@TheOstry322 4 года назад
Hahahahah dobre
@Hel_hare
@Hel_hare Год назад
W tym momencie zaczynam się zastanawiać jakim cudem ja potrafię mówić po polsku
@ralleyquattro
@ralleyquattro Год назад
Dokładnie. Ciekawe, no nie?
@Aa-dz4um
@Aa-dz4um Год назад
Ja tak samo ha ha, az mi sie ciezka glowa zrobila od tego wszystkiego a co dopiero dla obcokrajowca ha ha
@drewbydoobydoo2918
@drewbydoobydoo2918 Год назад
Trudno się tego nauczyć. Wiem, że Angielska wymowa jest trudna do nauczenia, wcale nie jest intuicyjna.
@lubiezolwie
@lubiezolwie Год назад
ja też
@Aa-dz4um
@Aa-dz4um Год назад
@@drewbydoobydoo2918 ale nam chodzi o jezyk Polski.
@nathantancula2762
@nathantancula2762 Год назад
When I began learning Polish in 2008, the grammar was incomprehensible for me since I am an American, native English speaker. Fast-forward to 2023 and there are people from all corners of the world moving here and the methods of teaching Polish as a second language have drastically improved! My advice to anyone living in Poland is to try to speak as much as possible and never get intimidated. Most Poles are happy that you at least try! Krok po kroku idziemy do przodu!
@plrc4593
@plrc4593 Год назад
And to learn as much words and sentences by heart as possible.
@Kawka1122
@Kawka1122 11 месяцев назад
Tip from Polish person to people learning Polish: don't care about grammar that much much in the begging- only vocabulary matters. We will understand you anyway. And true, we get overexcited when l foreigners speak Polish, cause it's well known how complex this language is.
@andersjjensen
@andersjjensen 10 месяцев назад
@@Kawka1122 Funny. Danish is as hard or harder than Polish, but when foreigners try to learn it they don't stand a chance because we will automatically switch to English if their Danish is hard to understand. Which is the case unless they're very good at it. One annoying feature of Danish is that besides having three more vowels than English in the alphabet (æ,ø and å) every vowel has at least three different pronunciations, and if people get them wrong it's borderline impossible to decipher what they're saying. If they also mess syllable emphasis (which can be VERY subtle phonetically but has a huge influence on intention/context/mood/humor) it can take several tries to understand them... which just makes English SO much easier for everyone involved even if their English is objectively as bad as their Danish.
@TetranDakker
@TetranDakker 10 месяцев назад
chrząszcz w szczebrzeszynie
@plrc4593
@plrc4593 10 месяцев назад
@@andersjjensen If Danes have such huge problems with understanding Danish, maybe you're not the brightest bulb in the chandelier? 😜
@elecstorm3701
@elecstorm3701 3 года назад
We, the Polish, have a simple rule: we see a video about our country, we flock like moths to a flame.
@roskcity
@roskcity 3 года назад
Just like any other country.
@checkdescriptionordontrepl2897
@checkdescriptionordontrepl2897 3 года назад
@@roskcity But Poland is an extreme version, trust me. It's hard to find video mentioning Poland without comment section full loaded with Polish comments.
@bearriver666
@bearriver666 3 года назад
you are also that way about alcohol and being stupid
@elecstorm3701
@elecstorm3701 3 года назад
@@bearriver666 a stereotypical way of thinking, but i'll let it slide cause it's close to truth
@checkdescriptionordontrepl2897
@checkdescriptionordontrepl2897 3 года назад
@@bearriver666 I don't know are you trying to insult Poland or not (i hope not, we had enough - we have been attacked many times by apmost all European countries, and many times attacked on internet, sometimes worldwide), but it's not true. Well, except alcohol in some cases, but only in half, Poland is not Russia. It's Semi-Russia.
@cheburashka8997
@cheburashka8997 4 года назад
youtube recommendation: hey wanna learn some polish? me, a native polish speaker: sure, why not
@lilywhitetouhou
@lilywhitetouhou 4 года назад
Ikr XDD
@joshuaarmijo5213
@joshuaarmijo5213 4 года назад
🤣🤣🤣 I'm a filipino and I'm studying polish 🤣
@killing_potion6663
@killing_potion6663 4 года назад
@@joshuaarmijo5213 polish sucks
@joshuaarmijo5213
@joshuaarmijo5213 4 года назад
@@killing_potion6663 I know it's hard, But i really want tp learn it
@yoyoyoi487
@yoyoyoi487 4 года назад
That's totally right! And I am learning German and RU-vid has recommended me this video. 👍
@trenth_pl
@trenth_pl Год назад
Profesor filologii polskiej na wykładzie: - Jak państwo wiecie, w językach słowiańskich jest nie tylko pojedyncze zaprzeczenie. Jest też podwójne zaprzeczenie. A nawet podwójne zaprzeczenie jako potwierdzenie. Nie ma natomiast podwójnego potwierdzenia jako zaprzeczenia. Na to głos z ostatniej ławki: - Dobra, dobra…
@rhodesianbrushstroke
@rhodesianbrushstroke 11 месяцев назад
"Jak państwo wiedzą"- forma "wiecie" jest w tym wypadku nieprawidłowa; albo jesteśmy na "ty" albo na "państwo".
@Klejnotnilu666
@Klejnotnilu666 10 месяцев назад
To sie profesor pomylil. jak moja kobieta mowi mi"tak, tak jedz na ryby" to znaczy ze nie mam jechac xD
@megfinn2336
@megfinn2336 10 месяцев назад
🤣😂😂🤣😂🤣🤣🤣 Dobre !
@Durczykiewicz
@Durczykiewicz 10 месяцев назад
Fajny żarcik:-)
@Durczykiewicz
@Durczykiewicz 10 месяцев назад
@@Klejnotnilu666 Jeszcze ważna jest intonacja :-)
@user-yp2fz4xh4b
@user-yp2fz4xh4b 9 месяцев назад
I'm russian, and when I came to meet relatives in Belarus, I met a Polish girl at the station and we understood only the general meaning of the phrases, but we somehow communicated. An hour later we were speaking some weird sort of dialect of the pan-slavic mixed with alien language and understood each other perfectly) Beautiful language, nice people, and, in my opinion, the most beautiful writing, maybe one day I will start learning. Best wishes for poles and everyone who read this Edit: guys in the comments are so friendly and tell interesting stories, omg I love this channel
@katharina...
@katharina... 7 месяцев назад
Ha ha, great story! 👍
@koultcechan
@koultcechan 7 месяцев назад
Как писал один комментатор: «Быть русскоговорящим и слышать Польскую речь похоже на сон, который ты только что видел и пытаешься вспомнить» :D
@e-xmile1044
@e-xmile1044 6 месяцев назад
good to know that we're not forgotten by other countries and their society. Great story though! I hope you'll have fun learning our language!
@eighthelement
@eighthelement 6 месяцев назад
As Polish I understand almost nothing of spoken Russian, but once I learned the cyryllic alphabet, I could easily read and understand Rybar posts. I feel like our languages are more similar than we think they are.
@user-yp2fz4xh4b
@user-yp2fz4xh4b 6 месяцев назад
@@eighthelement I think it only takes to get used to hearing and reading another language. By the way, having watched "Shrek" in Polish with subs (wonderful experience), I understand Polish videos almost 100%
@bezimxdxd859
@bezimxdxd859 4 года назад
po obejrzeniu dziwie się, że potrafię mówić po polsku.
@mkawosz
@mkawosz 4 года назад
ja też
@vennomen6286
@vennomen6286 4 года назад
Haha to samo
@Greg74948
@Greg74948 4 года назад
Tak ci się może wydawać. Posłuchaj mowy noblowskiej Olgi Tokarczuk i powiedz, ile udało ci się zrozumieć.
@drzewoznieba6297
@drzewoznieba6297 4 года назад
Ja też
@drzyzgarobert
@drzyzgarobert 4 года назад
@@Greg74948 Poetka jak poetka, przemowa jak przemowa. Nie robi wrażenia po wszystkich latach języka polskiego w szkole.
4 года назад
Just as the Indonesian 🇮🇩 and Polish 🇵🇱 flags are opposite to each other, "tak" means no in Indonesian and yes in Polish.
@drania76
@drania76 4 года назад
It also mean thank you in Norwegian.
@seneca983
@seneca983 4 года назад
The Polish flag is also the opposite of the flag of Monaco, though I'm not sure if "tak" means anything in French or Monégasque.
@seneca983
@seneca983 4 года назад
@You Kou: Poland and Indonesia don't have the same ratio in their flags either. Poland has 5:8 and Indonesia has 2:3.
@joshua5g
@joshua5g 4 года назад
There's also another way to say yes in Polish, it's "no"
@ari_jean
@ari_jean 4 года назад
Omg wow! :O
@sp0kojnypl
@sp0kojnypl 10 месяцев назад
As native, i need to tell: we dont know how we speak, it's just our "flow" so dont be afraid ;) PS: when you talk about "czytać" and "przeczytać" i was thinking about 1 super hard thing: we got: - czytać (read) - odczytać (read to others on loud for example speach) - wyczytać (read on loud too but for example list of students) - wczytać (read with high precission, with special commitment) - przeczytać (when you gonna read something in the future) - rozczytać (read something hard to understand, for example ugly letters on paper) - sczytać (download a file) - poczytać (read something for fun, without commitment) - doczytać (read something back what we left before) And we have maaaany words like this ;)
@datamek
@datamek 5 месяцев назад
Zaczytalem sie kompletnie w tym czytaniu
@cupcakkeisaslayqueen
@cupcakkeisaslayqueen 3 месяца назад
Odczytać can also mean just reading a message on like messenger, basically here it's used same as in english
@Abobus717
@Abobus717 3 месяца назад
Интересно,а с глаголами движения у вас как обстоят дела?в русском языке это кошмар для иностранцев. Ехать,заехать,объехать,переехать,выехать,въехать,отъехать и так далее.
@marcinpominski4591
@marcinpominski4591 2 месяца назад
@@Abobus717 W polskim jest tak samo.
@Abobus717
@Abobus717 2 месяца назад
@@marcinpominski4591 ясно
@ivayola
@ivayola Год назад
I'm a Bulgarian Polish speaker, and I can confirm that this has been the hardest Slavic language to learn. Guess the reason is that Poland is geographically the most distant country to Bulgaria from all other Slavic. However, I love the Polish culture, patriotic spirit, and the Polish people! BG♥PL!
@alexandermalinowski4277
@alexandermalinowski4277 Год назад
And you Bulgarians made Russians to use your language in the churches!
@Bakambol
@Bakambol 10 месяцев назад
Wszystkiego dobrego dla ciebie bracie😊
@aziatix1168
@aziatix1168 8 месяцев назад
Bulgarian language is based! 🇧🇬💞!
@guest23314
@guest23314 3 месяца назад
try learning Silesian ❤️ (its not dialect its language just polacks are mad)
@user-br1be3il7q
@user-br1be3il7q 2 месяца назад
Hi boy Bulgarian I want learn your and English or Spanish but so so hardly for me😢😢😢 how ca I learn Bulgarian ❤❤❤
@tofawil
@tofawil 3 года назад
Fun fact: słońce = the Sun słonice = multiple female elephants
@321imperator
@321imperator 3 года назад
it could be funny, if "słonice" (which is correct of course) is at least in use. As long as I live in Poland, I have never heard anyone saying "słonice" (female). We are using just "słoń" (male) as we do not know if the specific elephant is male or female :D we always use the male variety first if the gender of an animal is unknown
@januszgin3680
@januszgin3680 3 года назад
xd wiem
@kreizzz__6198
@kreizzz__6198 3 года назад
@@321imperator ponieważ in Poland a small group of people using a female name for Animals
@321imperator
@321imperator 3 года назад
​ @kreizzz __ well there are few animals that are only in female or male variation, so słonica does not sounds that natural, like e.g. "ta żaba" is female, and legends says that there is someone using "ten żab" as a male variation
@kreizzz__6198
@kreizzz__6198 3 года назад
@@321imperator i know people who tel ten żab for the male of frog
@TigerTzu
@TigerTzu 4 года назад
"Hey how do I say this in Polish?" "Well that depends..." "On what?" "On several things; who's saying it, what they're saying it about, what time of day it is, whether you slept well last night, how many planets are currently in retrograde, etc." "Ah... Thanks"
@robertagajeenian7222
@robertagajeenian7222 4 года назад
Wonderful! Been trying to learn Croatian, and there are days when your little joke wasn't so funny! Thank God Croatian pronunciation is not as difficult as Polish.
@samuan001
@samuan001 4 года назад
Well, I used to answer in such manner, when someone asked me: " how would you say in English...?" now, I've learnt to make a random choice of one option and I point out that" among other ways we can say..." :-)
@therealdave06
@therealdave06 4 года назад
@@robertagajeenian7222 Krk
@pepe72x
@pepe72x 4 года назад
perfect joke. I will share it with my friends :)
@MrNATAN467
@MrNATAN467 4 года назад
"Cóż, to zależy..." "Od czego?" "Od kilku rzeczy; kto to mówi, o czym mówią, jaka jest pora dnia, czy się wyspałeś poprzedniej nocy, ile planet jest właśnie w retrogradacji, itp." Oh, and you did not need to thank me in advance, but it's appreciated.
@azarishiba2559
@azarishiba2559 Год назад
I'm Costa Rican. I speak Spanish. She's Polish. Obviously speaks Polish. We met for the first time in Japan since we teach Japanese in our respective countries. We speak in Japanese. I taught her a little bit of Spanish. She enjoyed it. I ask her to teach me Polish. Then she said in Japanese "you don't want to learn Polish, believe me, there is nothing simple I can teach you". Still I was curious. Then, I watched this video. Yep, she was totally right. I can't believe Polish is this complicated. But, if someday I go there, I want to speak a little Polish to make her happy. If she someday comes here, I want to speak a little Polish in case she becomes homesick. So, ¡yo le entro, papá! 望むところにござる!
@r-poko2578
@r-poko2578 9 месяцев назад
very random and metedor you are compa latino
@azarishiba2559
@azarishiba2559 9 месяцев назад
@@r-poko2578 Ser aleatorio es parte de mi personalidad n_n
@wPeniSwiadomy
@wPeniSwiadomy 8 месяцев назад
Polski ma ten plus, że bez znajomości gramatyki, znając same słowa i używając ich bez odmian. W 90% przypadków, ludzie Cię zrozumią. Wiec nie przejmuj się i ucz słów :)
@azarishiba2559
@azarishiba2559 8 месяцев назад
@@wPeniSwiadomy Dziękuję! (I had to use a traslator, but really, thanks for the advice and good wishes!)
@mathusalen1
@mathusalen1 29 дней назад
De Costa Rica también y estoy aprendiendo polaco, la verdad me parece que es desde el español es más fácil de aprender que desde el inglés, tanto en términos de pronunciación (aunque palabras como mężczyzna me matan todavía jaja) como de ciertos aspectos gramaticales
@Spudmechanic
@Spudmechanic 2 года назад
Legend has it the poles would be the most technologically advanced people were it not for the fact that they spend 85 percent of their brain power comprehending their own language *Edit* Is only joke why you have to be mad
@niunka1
@niunka1 Год назад
true, true
@annasamek5179
@annasamek5179 Год назад
No, not at all, this is an exaggeration, if you learn it as a child it's not a problem. I think chinese with it's system of writing is much worse.
@mohammadwasapedopig665
@mohammadwasapedopig665 Год назад
You're not the sharpest tool in the shed are you?🤣
@Romczy
@Romczy Год назад
@@annasamek5179 as would EDI say "That was a joke"
@aneraxxmusic2343
@aneraxxmusic2343 Год назад
@@annasamek5179 Chinese grammar is really straightforward, it's really just alphabet and tones that make it tough
@Greg74948
@Greg74948 4 года назад
English: two, both Polish: dwa, dwaj, dwie, dwu, dwóm, dwóch, dwiema, dwoma, dwojga, dwoje, dwójka, dwójki, dwójce, dwójkę, dwójką, dwójek, dwójkom, dwójkami, dwójkach, obydwa, obydwaj, obydwie, obydwu, obydwóm, obydwóch, obydwiema, obydwoma, obydwoje, obydwojga, obydwojgu, obydwojgiem, oboje, obojga, obojgu, obojgiem, oba, obu, obaj, obie, obiema, oboma I think that's all forms, but I still might have missed something. Learn Polish! It's easy! 😃
@escobar9086
@escobar9086 4 года назад
Double, twin, twice xd
@miramarczynska8706
@miramarczynska8706 4 года назад
Dwójce, dwójka, dwójką, podwójny, podwójna, podwojony
@Greg74948
@Greg74948 4 года назад
English: double Polish: podwójny, podwójnego, podwójnemu, podwójnym, podwójna, podwójnej, podwójną, podwójne, podwójni, podwójnych, podwójnymi, podwójnie English: twin (adj.) Polish: bliźniaczy, bliźniaczego, bliźniaczemu, bliźniaczym, bliźniacza, bliźniaczej, bliźniaczą, bliźniacze, bliźniaczych, bliźniaczymi twin/twins (noun) = bliźniak (masc. sg.), bliźniaczka (fem. sg.)/bliźniaki (pl.), bliźniacy (masc. pl.) English: twice Polish: dwukrotnie, dwa razy, podwójnie
@maczopaczo123
@maczopaczo123 4 года назад
GrEaT iDeA! VeRy EaSy (im polish bruh)
@michalmazur4566
@michalmazur4566 4 года назад
Xd aż tyle tych odmian
@nequ6648
@nequ6648 4 года назад
Chciałem sobie poczytać komentarze z zagranicy a tu kurwa sami Polacy
@filokbobdragon1397
@filokbobdragon1397 4 года назад
Amerykańskie komentarze nie są takie popierdolone jak nasze xd
@tomaszdziamaek1839
@tomaszdziamaek1839 4 года назад
Wyrażaj się? Bez tej prostytutki nie można zdania zbudować, co?
@Kyumifun
@Kyumifun 4 года назад
Ja też Te uczucie kiedy po obejrzeniu zagranicznego filmu o Polsce na YT chcesz przejrzeć komentarze a tam sami Polacy
@robdob5350
@robdob5350 4 года назад
Jesteś jednym z nich, który napisał, więc idźże w chuj! xD btw feel the same
@smitepeke7456
@smitepeke7456 4 года назад
To na chuj dodajesz kolejny
@czekoladaczolg6018
@czekoladaczolg6018 Год назад
Zawsze się zastanawiałem jak wyglądałaby lekcja polskiego w anglii
@piotrang8634
@piotrang8634 Год назад
Polacy tylko dzięki temu mówią po polsku, że nie uczyli się mówić po polsku na lekcjach.
@user-qq8ry3rr4k
@user-qq8ry3rr4k Год назад
I'm Bulgarian and the grammar in our polish brothers language is the same as Bulgarian, so it's easy for me to understand it :D Love poland from bulgaria 🇧🇬❤️🇵🇱
@plrc4593
@plrc4593 Год назад
Greetings from Poland, friends. It's intereting what you say because Bulgarian is always pointed out as the most unique slavic language.
@bozydarziemniak1853
@bozydarziemniak1853 Год назад
I know from bulgarian workers sentence: Cigarita palita? :D
@aziatix1168
@aziatix1168 Год назад
🇵🇱🤜🏻💞🤛🏻🇧🇬
@arturhofa4327
@arturhofa4327 Год назад
Kocham Bułgarię z Polski!
@monke3842
@monke3842 Год назад
Граматиката няма нищо общо, ти пиян ли си ?
@XCashfull
@XCashfull 4 года назад
Im a simple hungarian. When I see something about Poland, I press like like there is no tomorrow!
@marcinsznn
@marcinsznn 4 года назад
Hungarian is quite fascinating.
@nyanniachan4963
@nyanniachan4963 4 года назад
Thanks, I'm a simple Pole and appreciate the friendship ;)
@Dominik-lc4pl
@Dominik-lc4pl 4 года назад
Dwa bratanki!
@MrMateunho
@MrMateunho 4 года назад
Dziękuję! Lengyel, magyar - két jó barát.
@user-ns1eq8sd9e
@user-ns1eq8sd9e 4 года назад
I ship Poland x Hungary
@kreatywnanazwa1557
@kreatywnanazwa1557 3 года назад
"Polska w tytule" Polacy: HI THERE
@petepete432pj8
@petepete432pj8 3 года назад
Tak prawda hehe
@mariamalinowska3099
@mariamalinowska3099 3 года назад
XDD dokładnie
@bartekcalinski1221
@bartekcalinski1221 3 года назад
"its free real estate"
@itssooverweresoback
@itssooverweresoback 3 года назад
Racja,
@tharealmikezee3165
@tharealmikezee3165 3 года назад
@@bartekcalinski1221 hahaha yeah everyone wants a piece of it: location, location, location
@aaronjohnson2215
@aaronjohnson2215 Год назад
Thanks to this, Polish is very rich and beautiful especially for books and poetry. Also you can create literally any new words you want and they will be understood. Best of luck to those who learn Polish 🙂 One thing from me is that thanks to cases and other grammar rules you mentioned, you can change word order in a sentence and it still means the same. Peter loves Kate. It's different to Kate loves Peter, or to Loves Peter Kate (incorrect in English), Peter Kate loves, etc. It either doesn't make sense or has opposite meaning. While in Polish, Piotr kocha Kasię, Kasię kocha Piotr, Kocha Kasię Piotr, Kasię Piotr Kocha, etc., they all mean exactly the same 😆
@bartomiejbonski6791
@bartomiejbonski6791 Год назад
Yes, when we have 3 words SVO like: Peter loves Marry - technically all 3! = 6 permutations are correct, but in every of them we accentuate different things or every of them sounds different, although the meaning is the same. I will show you this example: Piotr kocha Marię == Peter loves Marry. Piotr - nominative kocha - 3rd person (he or she) singular present tense of the verb "kochać" Marię - dative (nominative is Maria) 1// Piotr kocha Marię - classic, standard SVO. 2// Piotr Marię kocha - we accent "to love" = he loves her, not hates or only likes. We know that Peter has someting to Marry, but what? This is love, oh! 3// Kocha Piotr Marię - it sounds like a question: "Does Peter loves Marry?" = an inversion S and V, or we accent Marry: he loves Marry, not Monica or Jessica. We know that Peter loves somebody, but who is he or her? This is Marry, oh! 4// Kocha Marię Piotr - it also sounds like a question: "Does Peter loves Marry?" = an inversion V and O, or we accent Peter - it is Peter, not Mark or Henry. We know that Marry is loved, but by who? This is Peter, oh! 5// Marię Piotr kocha - this is like nr 2 - we accent "to love", but the next (second) accent is "Peter" - opposite to nr 2 when the second accent is for "Marry". 6// Marię kocha Piotr - this is like nr 4/ - we accent "Peter", but the next (second) accent is "to love" - opposite to nr 4 when the second accent is for "Marry". As you can see, the most accentuated word is the last word, next the second from the end and so on. And this feature of Polish is valuable thing for accentuation certain word or words in the sentence, it is good thing for poetry or general speaking and writing. We can also add of these 6 permutations a question mark or exclamation mark at the end and all 3x6=18 sentences would be correct, for example: a// Piotr kocha Marię? = Czy Piotr kocha Marię? == Does Peter loves Marry? - standard question. b// Marię kocha Piotr! == Peter loves Marry! - he said angrily. and so on... You can have 18 sentences. When it comes to frequency in normal everyday speaking or writing, I would define these 6 permutations like this: 1// Piotr kocha Marię - standard SVO, neutral, normal sentence, accent on Maria. 2// Piotr Marię kocha - quite solemnly, wow, this is love! Accent on Maria = SHE is loved! 3// Kocha Piotr Marię - in 90% sounds like question accenting Maria, as a claim quite strange or it sounds like poetry. 4// Kocha Marię Piotr - in 90% sounds like question accenting Piotr, as a claim quite strange or it sounds like poetry. 5// Marię Piotr kocha - quite solemnly, wow, this is love! Accent on Piotr = this is HIM! 6// Marię kocha Piotr - quite normal, neutral, but accent on Piotr, not Maria like in 1. Peter loves Marry == Piotr (nominative) kocha Marię (dative). Marry loves Peter == Maria (nominative) kocha Piotra (dative).
@namibiaxx1016
@namibiaxx1016 Год назад
German native here Polish my absolute favourite foreign language :)
@andreborges2881
@andreborges2881 2 года назад
*Poles flocking to video talking about Poland*. Very Brazilian of you, poles! Or... very Polish of us, Brazilians?! I feel tremendous endearment for Poland and Polish culture, living in Curitiba/Paraná, where a considerable polish immigrant population exists and is an important part of our shared cultural heritage. Cheers, from Brazil!
@plrc4593
@plrc4593 Год назад
I like very much how Portuguese sounds. With all those sh and j (like in Rio de Janeiro) and nasal vowels it sounds like Polish except that I don't understand anything :D Pity Portugal is that far away, not to mention Brazil ;/ Greetings from Poland.
@StrzelbaStian
@StrzelbaStian Год назад
É assim, neste aspecto somos iguais. Se bem que quando vejo otros polacos a "conquistarem" a secção de comentários fico com vergonha alheia 😒
@janjarco3983
@janjarco3983 Год назад
In Warsaw we used to have a bar called Parana with a latinoamerican vibe but it didn't survive the pandemic (sad story). WOuld you say that this village is kind of exception in terms of share of Polish population? Greetings from Poland!
@mistaPL
@mistaPL Год назад
@@janjarco3983 Curitiba is actually a big city.
@nobodynemoq
@nobodynemoq Год назад
You know, that huge amount of Poles emigrated to Brazil in the late 19th century? 😉
@arwahsapi
@arwahsapi 3 года назад
🇮🇩 (ID) Tak = No 🇵🇱 (PL) Tak = Yes Also look at our flags, they oppose each other.
@Langfocus
@Langfocus 3 года назад
Haha, interesting coincidence.
@user-sb2gt8dy6i
@user-sb2gt8dy6i 3 года назад
In czech : xD Ano=yes ne=no no=yes jo=ano And tha is somebody cofused when we say "ano.. no jo no" :DDD
@arcoiris_naranja
@arcoiris_naranja 2 года назад
„No“ in polish also is used as „yes“. 😈 - Chcesz coś zjeść? - No. - Do you want something to eat? - Yes.
@fqmq4975
@fqmq4975 2 года назад
🇷🇺 Tak - So
@theWater763
@theWater763 2 года назад
that's amazing I love it xD
@kubek
@kubek 3 года назад
As a person from Poland I sometimes think we made our language so hard in order to confuse foreign spies.
@maruseyes1320
@maruseyes1320 3 года назад
I speak russian and i understand the meaning of the 70% of the words
@ireneusztrzcinski7209
@ireneusztrzcinski7209 3 года назад
@@maruseyes1320 Not possible. There is too much difference between Polish and Russian vocabulary. I learnt Russian in school for 10 years and the grammar was easy to learn but the vocabulary is rather different. Some words are the same or very similar but in most cases words are different for the same things even for basic things (compare "thank you" in Russian and in Polish).
@Wojtackic
@Wojtackic 3 года назад
@@ireneusztrzcinski7209 sometimes it's easier for a language to learn another language than the other way round. Maybe Russians can understand more polish than polish can understand russian. Also you can't just say a person's experience is "not possible", maybe they actually do recognize 70% of the vocabulary
@ireneusztrzcinski7209
@ireneusztrzcinski7209 3 года назад
@@Wojtackic You are right. It is possible. You can never estimate somebody's abilities to understand a languague.
@svefngengillv3522
@svefngengillv3522 3 года назад
@@ireneusztrzcinski7209 I think we (Russians) can understand 50-60% of Polish but at the same time many Polish words sound archaic to us. We don't have them in modern vocabulary anymore but we understand them because we see these words in Russian literature of 18-19 centuries. So there's additional possibility why we can possibly understand more words.
@arturanowak
@arturanowak 2 года назад
Polish is the official language in Heaven. You have the whole eternity to learn it.
@boryskrupa5102
@boryskrupa5102 Год назад
I do solemnly confirm! Either you are a Pole and have fun immediately or you just need to learn for eternity to start having fun. hahahaha
@stevenbaker7025
@stevenbaker7025 8 месяцев назад
Nah that would be sexual moans 😏
@konradtomaszewski1677
@konradtomaszewski1677 6 месяцев назад
in Heaven you actually have a binary choice of what to spend eternity on - learning Polish or Chinese alphabet. The sad thing is that a lot of Poles now choose the former;)
@David280GG
@David280GG 4 месяца назад
​@@stevenbaker7025what🌩🧑🏿🌩💀
@cupcakkeisaslayqueen
@cupcakkeisaslayqueen 3 месяца назад
​@@stevenbaker7025bruh what 😭
@ludvig9184
@ludvig9184 2 года назад
I've just started learning polish. I'm progressing quite quickly but damn is this language complicated. Just when you think you know a word, you find out that word has a million inflections.
@patrickb1811
@patrickb1811 Год назад
It gets easier when u get a chance to speak with natives. gl
@mka9682
@mka9682 2 года назад
Polski jest taki trudny że aż Polacy oglądają filmiki po angielsku o języku polskim😅🤣
@ziooom86
@ziooom86 2 года назад
Haha pozamiatałeś
@strawberrymoon9875
@strawberrymoon9875 2 года назад
rel XD
@Antek0111
@Antek0111 2 года назад
no
@jowitapodgorska2932
@jowitapodgorska2932 2 года назад
Prawda
@Koralciekocha
@Koralciekocha 2 года назад
XD
@jax547
@jax547 4 года назад
Hungarians: We made our language so hard that noone foreigner can learn it Poles: Hold my vodka
@mokragapka4999
@mokragapka4999 4 года назад
wódka
@frogmancoolboy1631
@frogmancoolboy1631 4 года назад
Honestly we arent in vodka anymore. Maybe some drunks on street are in vodka.
@magdalenamaqbool1326
@magdalenamaqbool1326 4 года назад
Hungarian.polish.swedish .finish icelandic. arabic mandarynian hardcore:///
@lejanuszerskijanuszer5528
@lejanuszerskijanuszer5528 4 года назад
@WiseQ This vodka suits perfectly
@sweetieimikadox1549
@sweetieimikadox1549 4 года назад
Chyba wódka*
@patrik1881
@patrik1881 11 месяцев назад
Ten divný moment, keď si ako Slovák povieš, že poľský komentár by bol zrozumitelnejší 😂
@watarod
@watarod 11 месяцев назад
cześć pozdrawiam z polski
@patrik1881
@patrik1881 10 месяцев назад
@@watarod Ja tiež pozdravujem do Poľska.
@shadow111pl
@shadow111pl 10 месяцев назад
ten śmieszny moment kiedy rozumiesz język czeski nawet jeśli się go nie uczyłeś.
@Lilly20998
@Lilly20998 10 месяцев назад
jak ja to umiem przeczytać
@MrTheVootz
@MrTheVootz 10 месяцев назад
😅
@martanowicka3340
@martanowicka3340 Год назад
For me, one of the most interesting feature of Polish is that the grammar allows us to express our attitude towards magical or mythical characters. For example the word: Anioły / Aniołowie. They both stand for "Angels". But one has a grammatical ending as a human being and the other as a thing or an animal. And in this way we can emphasize the difference of: when we talk about angels and we mean beings resembling humans or kind of inhuman creatures.
@martanowicka3340
@martanowicka3340 5 месяцев назад
@@Jaze09 Thanks to your comment I've revisited my own thought and changed a bit my poor English grammar. I hope it's still OK with you :-) BTW thank you for your comment :-) I appreciate it!
@patana256
@patana256 4 года назад
How difficult can a language be? Poland: yes
@aiire9137
@aiire9137 4 года назад
@Antoś Raczyk ić stont
@PatrO_exe
@PatrO_exe 4 года назад
@Antoś Raczyk nie kłam
@knurbojowy629
@knurbojowy629 4 года назад
Weź stąd spieprzaj
@_rd_5043
@_rd_5043 4 года назад
@@knurbojowy629 do kogo mówisz?
@Mario-np3dz
@Mario-np3dz 4 года назад
Tak to jest trudny język
@TDMxGalgas
@TDMxGalgas 4 года назад
Polish for dummies: Lesson 1: Mama (mom), Tata (dad) Lesson 2: Grzegorz Brzęczyszczykiewicz, Chrząszczyżewoszyce, powiat Łękołody. Have fun learning.
@dinobot796
@dinobot796 4 года назад
Zloto Bro
@shellgecko
@shellgecko 4 года назад
Instructions unclear I ended up summoning a demon.
@aarpftsz
@aarpftsz 4 года назад
To be fair, Brzęczyszczykiewicz isn't even a real surname
@Axacqk
@Axacqk 4 года назад
@@shellgecko Underrated!
@ricorodrigues489
@ricorodrigues489 4 года назад
Waste of time lol
@tdegler
@tdegler Год назад
Now you can understand why polish programmers (IT developers) can so well comprehend programming languages and are so good in general... No language is a challenge after such preparation! ;)
@boryskrupa5102
@boryskrupa5102 Год назад
Hyperlogic imprinted in childhood. Clever ancestors did a great job. Primitive languages waste computing power of kids brains. Polish jokes have a cause - simple minds get envious.
@Aa-dz4um
@Aa-dz4um Год назад
@@boryskrupa5102 a jak myslisz kto stoi za Polish jokes?
@boryskrupa5102
@boryskrupa5102 Год назад
@@Aa-dz4um stoją za nimi kompleksy prymitywnych niemców i rosjan.
@Aa-dz4um
@Aa-dz4um Год назад
@@boryskrupa5102 😂😂😂 i tu sie bardzo mylisz. Niemcy i Rosjanie nie maja z tym nic wspolnego.
@boryskrupa5102
@boryskrupa5102 Год назад
@@Aa-dz4um ostatni raz jak się pomyliłem to było 22 lata temu, więc mała szansa hehehehe.
@brianfleming8561
@brianfleming8561 Год назад
For me, a student of Polish for 6 years, the most difficult/irritating features were the constant grammatical exceptions and the seemingly endless synonyms. But once you get them, it just makes your language experience all the richer.
@albimiftari8117
@albimiftari8117 4 года назад
Ja jako albańczyk chodziłem na studium języka polskiego w łodzi 4 lata temu i tam nauczyłem się polskiego. Jestem bardzo zadowolony że podjąłęm tą decyzje bo teraz pracuję jaką przewodnik i oprowadzam polaków po albanii. Pozdrawiam
@brihoo
@brihoo 4 года назад
No i super! :)
@raphaelloyola3495
@raphaelloyola3495 4 года назад
Szacun
@xaxas94
@xaxas94 4 года назад
Bardzo ładnie, ale tę decyzję a nie tą decyzję (popularny błąd, wielu Polaków też go popełnia). :)
@staramenda857
@staramenda857 4 года назад
W Albanii jest pięknie :D
@bartekr8870
@bartekr8870 4 года назад
Szacunek :) Chciałbym kiedyś pojechać do Albanii mając ciebie za przewodnika. Może kiedyś :)
@SuperTroll2003
@SuperTroll2003 4 года назад
dear englishmen kind, this is most forms of word eat in polish, and it isn't all forms of eat: Jeść - to eat (unfinished) Zjeść - to eat (finished) Jadać - to eat (unfinished + regularly for X peroid of time, "I like to eat at KFC") Zjadać - to eat (finished + regulary, "I like to eat fish bones") Jem - I eat Zjem - I will eat Jadam - I eat (unfinished + regularly for X peroid of time, "I eat at KFC") Zjadam - I eat (finished + regulary, "I eat fish bones") Jesz - you eat Zjesz - you will eat Jadasz - you eat (unfinished + regularly for X peroid of time, "You eat at KFC") Zjadasz - you eat (finished + regulary, "You eat fish bones") Je - he/she/it eats Zje - he/she/it will eat Jada - he/she/it eats (finished + regularly for X peroid of time, "He eats at KFC") Zjada - he/she/it eats (finished + regulary, "He eats fish bones") Jemy - we eat Zjemy - we will eat Jadamy - we eat (unfinished + regularly for X peroid of time, "We eat at KFC") Zjadamy - we eat (finished + regularly, "We eat fish bones") Jecie - you eat Zjecie - you will eat Jadacie - you eat (unfinished + regularly for X peroid of time, "You eat at KFC") Zjadacie - you eat (finished + regularly, "You eat fish bones") Jedzą - they eat Zjedzą - they will eat Jadają - they eat (unfinished for X peroid of time, "We eat in KFC") Zjadają - they eat (finished + regularly, "We eat fish bones") Jadłem - I [man] was eating (unfinished) Jadłam - I [woman] was eating (unfinished) Jadłeś - you [man] were eating (unfinished) Jadłaś - you [woman] were eating (unfinished) Zjadłem - I [man] ate (finished) Zjadłam - I [woman] ate (finished) Zjadłeś - you [man] ate (finished) Zjadłaś - you [woman] ate (finished) Jadałem - I [man] used to eat (unfinished + reguraly in the past (unfinished at the time) = I'm not doing it anymore, "I used to eat KFC") Jadałam - I [woman] used to eat (reguraly in the past + unfinished at the time = I'm not doing it anymore, "I used to eat at KFC") Zjadałem - I [man] used to eat (regularly in the past + finished at the time, "I used to eat fish bones") Zjadałam - I [woman] used to eat (regularly in the past + finished at the time, "I used to eat fish bones") Zjadałeś - You [man] used to eat (regularly in the past + finished at the time, "You used to eat fish bones") Zjadałaś - You [woman] used to eat (regularly in the past + finished at the time, "You used to eat fish bones") Jadł - he was eating (unfinished) Jadła -she was eating (unfinished) Jadło - it was eating (unfinished) Zjadł - he ate (finished) Zjadał - he used to eat (regularly in the past + finished at the time) Zjadła - she ate (finished) Zjadała - she used to eat (regularly in the past + finished at the time) Zjadło - it ate (finished) Zjadało - it used to eat (regularly in the past + finished at the time) Jedliśmy - we [men] were eating (unfinished) Jadłyśmy - we [women] were eating (unfinished) Jadaliśmy - we [men] used to eat (regularly it the past for X peroid of time + unfinished at the time, "We used to it at KFC") Jadałyśmy - we [women] used to it (regularly it the past for X peroid of time + unfinished at the time, "We used to it at KFC") Zjadaliśmy - we [men] used to eat (regularly it the past + finished at the time, "We used to eat fish bones") Zjadałyśmy - we [women] used to eat (regularly it the past + finished at the time, "We used to eat fish bones") Jedliście - you [men] were eating (unfinished) Jadłyście - you [women] were eating (unfinished) Jadaliście - you [men] used to eat (unfinished at the time) Jadałyście - you [women] used to eat (unfinished at the time) Zjedliście - you [men] ate (finished) Zjadłyście - you [women] ate (finished) Jedli - they [men] were eating (unfinished) Jadły - they [women] were eating (unfinished) Jadali - they [men] used to eat (unfinished at the time) Jadały - they [women] used to eat (unfinished at the time) Zjedli - they [men] ate (finished) Zjadły - they [women] ate (finished) Zjadali - they [men] used to eat (unfinished at the time) Zjadały - they [women] used to eat (unfinished at the time) Jedzono - (there was) an eating (unfinished at the time), "There was a dinner. Eating vegan meals (unfinished)." Zjedzono - (there was) an eating (finished at the time), "There was a dinner. Eating vegan meals (finished)." Jadano - (there was) an eating (regularly + unfinished at the time), "In medival Europe there was no eating of potatos." Zjadano - (there was) an eating (regularly + finished at the time), "In royal spheres there was no eating of fish bones." Jedz - eat (unfinished){order}, "Keep eating" Zjedz - eat (finished){order}, "Eat it" Jadaj - eat (regularly and unfinished){order}, "Eat more vitamins." Zjadaj - eat (regularly and finished){order}, "Eat whole meals." (in case of "eat" there is no difference here, but it can be for other verbs") Jedzmy - let's eat (present, unfinished) Zjedzmy - let's eat (present, finished), "Let's eat that pizza, don't order next one" Jadajmy - let's eat (in future + regularly + unfinished), "Let's eat at KFC more often." Zjadajmy - let's eat (in future + regularly + finished) Jedzcie - you [plural] eat {order}, "Eat a soup now" Zjedzcie - you [plural] eat (finished){order} Jadajcie - you [plural] eat (regularly and unfinished {order}, "Eat more vitamins." Zjadajcie - you [plural] eat (regularly and finished {order} Jadłbym - I [man] would eat (unfinished = without specified intention) Zjadłbym - I [man] would eat (finished = with intention to finish it) Jadłabym - I [woman] would eat (unfinished) Zjadłabym - I [woman] would eat (finished) Jadłbyś - you [man] would eat (unfinished) Jadłabyś - you [woman] would eat (unfinished) Zjadłbyś - you [man] would eat (finished) Zjadłabyś - you [woman] would eat (finished) Jadłby - he would eat (unfinished) Jadłaby - she would eat (unfinished) Jadłoby - it would eat (unfinished) Zjadłby - he would eat (finished) Zjadłaby - she would eat (finished) Zjadłoby - it would eat (finished) Jadałbym - I [man] would eat (regularly + unfinished) Jadłabym - I [woman] would eat (regularly + unfinished) Zjadałbym - I [man] would eat (regularly + finished) Zjadałabym - I [woman] would eat (regularly + finished) Jadałbyś - you [man] would eat (regularly + unfinished) Jadałabyś - you [woman] would eat (regularly + unfinished) Zjadałbyś - you [man] would eat (regularly + finished) Zjadałabyś - you [woman] would eat (regularly + finished) Jadłby - he would eat (unfinished) Zjadłby - he would eat (finished) Jadałaby - she would eat (unfinished) Zjadałaby - she would eat (finished) Jadłoby - it would eat (unfinished) Zjadłoby - it would eat (finished) Jedlibyśmy - we [men] would eat (unfinished) Jedłybyśmy - we [women] would eat (unfinished) Zjedlibyśmy - we [men] would eat (finished) Zjadłybyśmy - we [women] would eat (finished) Jadalibyśmy - we [men] would eat (regularly + unfinished) Jadałybyśmy - we [women] woule eat (regularly + unfinished) Zjadalibyśmy - we [men] would eat (regularly + finished) Zjadałybyśmy - we [women] would eat (regularly + finished) Jedlibyście - you [men] would eat (unfinished) Jedłybyście - you [women] would eat (unfinished) Zjedlibyście - you [men] would eat (finished) Zjadłybyście - you [women] would eat (finished) Jadalibyście - you [men] would eat (regularly + unfinished) Jadałybyście - you [women] would eat (regularly + unfinished) Zjadalibyście - you [men] would eat (regularly + finished) Zjadałybyście - you [women] would eat (regularly + finished) Jedliby - they [men] would eat (unfinished) Jadłyby - they [women] would eat (unfinished) Zjedliby - they [men] would eat (finished) Zjadłyby - they [women] would eat (finished) Jadaliby - they [men] would eat (regularly + unfinished) Jadałyby - they [women] would eat (regularly + unfinished) Zjadaliby - they [men] would eat (regularly + finished) Zjadałyby - they [women] would eat (regularly + finished) >>> Jedzony - being eaten (masculine)(unfinished), "This meal is being eaten." Jedzona - being eaten (feminine)(unfinished), "This soup is being eaten." Zjedzony - being eaten (masculine)(finished), "This meal has been eaten." Zjedzona - being eaten (feminine)(finished), "This suop has been eaten." Jedzeni - being eaten (plural masculine)(unfinished), Jedzone - being eaten (plural feminine)(unfinished), "Apples are being eaten by worms." Zjedzeni - being eaten (plural masculine)(finished), Zjedzone - being eaten (plural feminine)(finished), "Apples have been eaten by worms." Jadany - eaten (masculine)(unfinished), "That meal is often eaten in Spain" Jadana - eaten (feminine)(unfinished), "Pizza is usually eaten with ketchup" Jadani - eaten (prural masculine)(unfinished) Jadane - eaten (plural feminine)(unfinished), "Slogs are eaten in France" Zjadany - eaten (masculine)(finished) Zjadana - eaten (feminine)(finished) Zjadani - eaten (prural masculine)(finished) Zjadane - eaten (plural feminine)(finished), "Corpses of dead animals are eaten by worms" there is some more, but it was too hard to translate
@skibi__
@skibi__ 4 года назад
I respect that
@impact0r
@impact0r 4 года назад
Yeah, stick it to them, the englishmen kind!
@aVeColleCter
@aVeColleCter 4 года назад
tak pokrótce
@user-tg4jn1fn1b
@user-tg4jn1fn1b 4 года назад
Najdłuższy komentarz ever! 👍
@mangozjebuspospolitus6638
@mangozjebuspospolitus6638 4 года назад
Boże, aż zaczęłam dziwnie patrzeć na te słowa xF
@RobertHajdak
@RobertHajdak Год назад
Język polski jest piękny - bardzo bogaty, precyzyjny i "skłonny do poezji". Cieszę się, że go znam.
@watcher13th
@watcher13th Год назад
Tez tak myslalem, dopuki nie pomiseszkalem 20 lat w usa i zauwazylem ze w Polskim brakuje bardzo wielu slow... Jest wiele slow (nie tylko angielskich), ktore trzeba "opisywac" krotkim zdaniem aby je wyrazic po Polsku. Co gorsza jezyk sie nie "rozwija", nie mowie tu o zapozyczeniach i slangu, tylko wlasnie o tworzeniu nowych slow ktorych brakuje.
@Lina-qn5hj
@Lina-qn5hj 11 месяцев назад
​@@watcher13th brak niektórych słów działa w dwie strony, ale po tym "dopuki" wnioskuję, że raczej słabo u ciebie z polskim, nic dziwnego, że słów nie znasz
@watcher13th
@watcher13th 11 месяцев назад
@@Lina-qn5hj Zgadza sie, nie uzywam Polskiego od wielu lat, ale chyba nie jest tak zle bo zrozumialas co napisalem. Natomiast z tym dzialaniem w dwie strony to poniekad masz racje, ale jest duza dysproporcja na niekozysc Polskiego wlasnie z powodu ze ludzie za bardzo "pilnuja poprawnosci", jak ty przed chwila. Nie mozna latwo "stwozyc" swojego slowa bo zaraz ktos sie przyczepi ze to "nie po polsku", pomimo ze wie co mowisz. Dziala to w brew pozorom na niekorzysc jezyka bo sie nie rozwija.
@Lina-qn5hj
@Lina-qn5hj 11 месяцев назад
@@watcher13th to była akurat prosta ortografia, a nie tworzenie nowych słów ;)
@jankowal8871
@jankowal8871 10 месяцев назад
@@watcher13th Dokładnie ,dużo rzeczy powinno zostać usuniętych z ortografii bo po co trzymać np. u - ó, ż-rz,ch-h
@-kattya-
@-kattya- Год назад
As a Hungarian, I'm happy to be here and learn a lot about Polish language 🤗🍻
@plrc4593
@plrc4593 Год назад
Greetings from Poland.
@movemelody1
@movemelody1 11 месяцев назад
Dlaczego wybraliście Orbana?
@maxdeliver
@maxdeliver 10 месяцев назад
@@movemelody1 a Ty czemu wybrałeś Kaczora?
@-kattya-
@-kattya- 9 месяцев назад
@@movemelody1 good question.. I've never voted for him and never will. Hungarians are brainwashed :(
@ikkai2354
@ikkai2354 7 месяцев назад
lmaoo @@maxdeliver
@user-uw2rf4vy8u
@user-uw2rf4vy8u 4 года назад
My native language is Russian, but I really adore Polish, it’s so beautifully expressive. Moje najlepsze życzenia dla wszystkich Polaków!
@beredentod
@beredentod 4 года назад
Самое лучше поздравление! И мы желаем всем Русским всего лучшего!
@damirimamagic5064
@damirimamagic5064 4 года назад
I’m Bosnian, and I agree, Polish is beautiful, but it’s difficult!
4 года назад
Cheers from Poland!
@Xback86
@Xback86 4 года назад
Awww Dziękuje ❤ I love Rusdian
@Dziewczynafajna
@Dziewczynafajna 4 года назад
Dziękujemy! ❤️😇
@elodgubcsi
@elodgubcsi 3 года назад
I'm a simple Hungarian. I see Poland, I klick like. 🇭🇺❤🇵🇱
@Xyliaaa
@Xyliaaa 3 года назад
@szczepanmaj8771
@szczepanmaj8771 3 года назад
💓🇭🇺🇵🇱
@nataliak5277
@nataliak5277 3 года назад
aww
@alfrangomes454
@alfrangomes454 3 года назад
Love from germany... Wait
@DarekPhotography
@DarekPhotography 3 года назад
Lengyel és magyar: két unokaöccs.
@iraalexa
@iraalexa 2 года назад
A lot of love to Poland from Ukraine ❤️❤️❤️ We love you with all our hearts!
@KristVladic
@KristVladic Год назад
@Khokhol Slayer Wołyń, Katyń, Palmiry, Ponary. Pamiętamy, nie zapominamy. Nie dajemy putinowcom marzącym o nowym Katyniu.. ...grać naszymi ofiarami.
@lomejordepolonia
@lomejordepolonia Год назад
God bless Ukraine!
@opabinnier
@opabinnier 11 месяцев назад
That is so sweet.
@Doones51
@Doones51 8 месяцев назад
i have many DNA relatives in Ukraine. I pray for the war to be over and for the Russians leaving your country.
@djvojtan
@djvojtan 6 месяцев назад
Slava Ukrainie!
@xMastJedi
@xMastJedi 11 месяцев назад
I am polish and I think you didnt mention VERY important factor - Melody of our language. Using different intonation/stress/melody the sentence can be fact or question. 'On jest szybki.' can be translate as 'He's fast.' or 'Is he fast?' Of course in written language you'll use question mark and all is clear. 'On jest szybki?' But in spoken language we dont use questionmarks :D Just change intonation/melody. BTW - good work!
@alxawr9479
@alxawr9479 4 года назад
I'm a Russian. I've learned German, French, Spanish, Ukrainian, English, and Polish to some degree, tried to taste Arabic, Korean and Persian. But my favorite one is undoubtedly Polish. It's just amazing. Pronounciation is an exercise and pleasure for your tounge. The sound is so versatile... You just can make it sound as you wish - super soft, super harsh, elegant, colloquial, high or low... It's so amazingly flexive, so you may speak shortly and move words anywhere you want to emphasize any of them, because the form of a word says enough and gives you freedom. And one more thing wich is perhaps only for a Russian speaker - Polish sounds so lovely aristocratic, it looks just a Renaissance-styled speech indeed. The words which are archaic now in Russian are common in Polish (such as "pokój" (room) or "usta" (mouth)), and speaking Polish I feel myself in XIX century or sometimes in an old tale a bit :) You may find a lot of literature in Polish (I prefer "The Witcher" and Sienkiewicz historical novels). And most of games I play have Polish localization, so It's easy to immerse yourself into the language. And, yeah, there are some 45 million Poles to speak :)
@alxawr9479
@alxawr9479 4 года назад
@@adamkasztankiewicz8835 Ma pan rację. For instance in pre-soviet Russian there were two plural pronouns for third person: "oni" and "one", just like in Polish, but now there is only "oni" for both masculine and feminine. But also Polish was formed as a literary language in 16th century (like Italian), while Russian - in 19th century (like German). So many words and forms, wich were fixed in Polish since 16th, became obsolete and disappeared in Russian to 19th.
@bogudanbogosz4150
@bogudanbogosz4150 4 года назад
@@adamkasztankiewicz8835 -- zastrzeliłeś mnie tym. Bardzo interesujące spostrzeżenie.
@onesandzeroes
@onesandzeroes 4 года назад
That's a fascinating perspective. I never thought a Russian would perceive Polish like that.
@bogudanbogosz4150
@bogudanbogosz4150 4 года назад
@@alxawr9479 i Adamie Kasztankiewicz -- bardzo interesujące, skąd macie taką wiedzę? Czy jesteście nauczycielami?
@ertekt4540
@ertekt4540 4 года назад
Very interesting point of view. Thank you.
@mikesatthehelm5115
@mikesatthehelm5115 4 года назад
As a native speaker of Polish I am beyond grateful that I didn’t have to learn it
@maxx1014
@maxx1014 4 года назад
The question is who has to learn Polish
@landyandy270
@landyandy270 4 года назад
I'm pretty certain I heard a chorus of 'Amen' then.
@Byrod1
@Byrod1 4 года назад
@@maxx1014 Those that want to live in Poland have to learn it, hundreds of thousands of refugees from fucked up Western Europe.
@jjwp-ql5rv
@jjwp-ql5rv 4 года назад
You still had to learn it. You weren't born talking it.
@janstozek4850
@janstozek4850 4 года назад
Indeed, if I had to learn it as a second language, I'd probably never been able to do it. Although I've met several foreigners speaking very good Polish. And not all of them are Ukrainians, who catch it very fast, if they are up to.
@EmoTeofanov
@EmoTeofanov Год назад
After working for 6 years with the most intelligent, and hardworking polish guys Maciej and Łukasz, I can say only this: "O kurva! I love Poland!" 🥰
@opabinnier
@opabinnier 11 месяцев назад
I speak Serbocroat... that sounds shockingly indecent. Maybe in Polish "k***a" does not mean hussy or slut or anything like that! OR MAYBE IT DOES?!?!?! :)
@MrQuyag
@MrQuyag 10 месяцев назад
@@opabinnier Słowo "k*rwa" jest nieprzyzwoitym słowem którego nie przystoi używać w miejscach publicznych oraz ma więcej potocznych znaczeń. Od potocznie używanego słowa na prostytutkę, wyzwisk po przekleństwa które dzięki intonacji głosu możesz wyczuć czy osoba używająca tego słowa jest zdenerwowany, przestraszony, zdziwiony czy szczęśliwy :D
@wlodek7422
@wlodek7422 10 месяцев назад
​@@opabinnierit does but it's used as "shit" too, and it can be used in expressive way when you're happy/disapointed etc, it fits everywhere lol
@marcind-ec1de
@marcind-ec1de 4 месяца назад
Haha! No jokes, man :-)
@izzy4833
@izzy4833 Год назад
This seems so difficult to learn but I am so determine to learn Polish 🤩
@worldclassyoutuber2085
@worldclassyoutuber2085 Год назад
Any reason you like to torture yourself with Polish? 😂
@izzy4833
@izzy4833 Год назад
@@worldclassyoutuber2085 My dad's side of the family is Polish. I just want to be closer to them. ☺️
@marta.mp3
@marta.mp3 Год назад
@@izzy4833 I wish you luck! ♥
@IthliniEllyanSenah
@IthliniEllyanSenah Год назад
@Izzy R U still determined? 😅
@mario150ba4
@mario150ba4 Год назад
I can help you, if you want.
@LelekKozodoj69
@LelekKozodoj69 4 года назад
If I was not a native Polish speaker, my head would explode from just watching this video.
@VladderGraf
@VladderGraf 4 года назад
My thoughts exactly :)
@spoonwithoutleg
@spoonwithoutleg 4 года назад
Guys, as a native Polish speaker, my head is maybe not exploding, but I know, I'm not able to explain that to my Filipina girlfriend. I'm not bad in Polish, but to explain it and why is that and that... Kudos to all the teachers.
@tobyevans2474
@tobyevans2474 4 года назад
At some point, I could not process, I just took it in.
@T3mas1
@T3mas1 4 года назад
I am Czech and I had the very same feeling.
@NorseGraphic
@NorseGraphic 4 года назад
I got a blue screen of death and shut down. Not my computer. Me.
@luchadorito
@luchadorito 4 года назад
I Am a simple Hungarian, I see polish, I like “Lengyel magyar, két jó barát együtt harcol s issza borát”
@chernobogroach6359
@chernobogroach6359 4 года назад
polak węgier dwa bratanki, i do szabli i do szklanki
@northlord8938
@northlord8938 4 года назад
luchadorito greetings from Poland, barát 👍
@mototroter
@mototroter 4 года назад
Polak, Węgier, dwa bratanki, i do szabli, i do szklanki.
@piotrampula3694
@piotrampula3694 4 года назад
Polak Węgier dwa bratanki i do szabli i do szklanki
@FlyLabel
@FlyLabel 4 года назад
Polak Węgier, dwa bratanki
@kathy2trips
@kathy2trips 2 года назад
As a third generation Polish-American, I'm fascinated. I've learned a lot by watching this video. Thank you!
@sebastiankrajewski2029
@sebastiankrajewski2029 2 года назад
No, you're just american. The fact that your grandfather was a shoemaker doesn't make you one.
@aak8297
@aak8297 Год назад
That's lovely Kathy! There is a lot to be proud of when it comes to your roots, don't let anyone fool you!
@niewiem553
@niewiem553 Год назад
yet there are mistakes in the video
@jamesbukowski
@jamesbukowski Год назад
Super Kasia. Cieszymy się razem z Tobą 👌😉
@penultimania4295
@penultimania4295 Год назад
@Sebastian Krajewski exactly lol, I'm so fed up with Americans claiming they are 'xyz-American' when they were born and have spent their entire life in America. You are NOT one of us, whatever the country may be. Everyone looks at you like you're insane. Polką to ty nie jesteś, więc daruj sobie Amerykańska dziewko o/
@slyfox6996
@slyfox6996 6 месяцев назад
I recently went to poland for a vacation, warszawa is absolutely lovely. Although I was a very basic understanding I've started to put alot more work into it. A great thing to practice when you learn how to say something new is to list out all of the ways you could use it in every form of a sentence. I know that helps me with getting used to the looser syntactical rules. Hopefully I'll be able to move there for my doctorate, and by then I'll speak much better. Go poland!
@onw0
@onw0 4 года назад
As a Polish native speaker i would say: Ok. That was the basics. Now let's talk about the exceptions 😂🤣
@Aciek25
@Aciek25 4 года назад
And our inconsistent grammar
@Turagrong
@Turagrong 4 года назад
As a Czech I don't believe you have so few declension and conjugation classes :-)
@henningbartels6245
@henningbartels6245 4 года назад
I ' ve once heart that Polish has the most exceptions amoung the Slavic languages?!
@ewaleokadia76
@ewaleokadia76 4 года назад
In Polish, there are exceptions of exceptions. I took Polish in college so that I could better improve in the language although I already spoke it and could read and write it. My grandparents, especially, grandpa taught me the most.😀
@piotrr4509
@piotrr4509 4 года назад
@@henningbartels6245 The biggest problem is that if you are not a native speaker you will never rember all the exceptions, becouse even native speakers don't remember them
@UrPPhard
@UrPPhard 4 года назад
I'm Polish and I watch English guy teaching me how to speak Polish. What is my life
@pawemadej94
@pawemadej94 4 года назад
He's not english
@aksb2482
@aksb2482 4 года назад
He's actually Canadian
@UrPPhard
@UrPPhard 4 года назад
@@aksb2482 ok thanks. I didn't know
@efisgpr
@efisgpr 4 года назад
Least you're practicing English ...
@Przemo-c
@Przemo-c 4 года назад
Same. Loving it, especially the part when finally something simple about polish language is presented at 19min on a 22min video.
@luketoff7410
@luketoff7410 Год назад
There are also quite interesting iterative verb forms in Polish. They're used with some verbs. to see - widzieć (imperfective form), zobaczyć (perfective form), widywać iterative form - to see from time to time; to go/walk - chodzić/iść (imperf. form), pójść (perf. form), chadzać (iterative form); to sleep - spać (imperf. f.), zasnąć (perf. f.), sypiać (iterative f.). All these verbs conjugate. E.g. the 1st person sg.: chodziłem / poszedłem / chadzałem; widziałem / zobaczylem / widywałem.
@Matthew.Morycinski
@Matthew.Morycinski 9 месяцев назад
Chodziłem do szkoły = I used to go to school. Chadzałem do szkoły = I used to go to school, sometimes. (more as a joke, I did not make it a habit to go to school.) 😀
@aapelijoronen8174
@aapelijoronen8174 Год назад
Moving to Poland to study economics and Polish! Studied it for a month by myself now and gotta say, a very interesting language. Knowing Russian definately helps here to an extent 😅
@plrc4593
@plrc4593 Год назад
Greetings from Poland
@astralvcid
@astralvcid 4 года назад
okay, youtube recommendation. why are you showing me this. i'm already polish
@wojciech9538
@wojciech9538 4 года назад
May be you Just want to learn polish 🤔
@filipswiercz280
@filipswiercz280 4 года назад
Polski jest łatwy... Przynajmniej dla mnie ;)
@turasogoras4728
@turasogoras4728 4 года назад
@@filipswiercz280 bo jesteś polakiem ? xd
@nnawaia7462
@nnawaia7462 4 года назад
Witamy
@astralvcid
@astralvcid 4 года назад
@@wojciech9538 i already know polish lol
@MichaTerajewicz
@MichaTerajewicz 4 года назад
Say "chrząszcz" and you get Polish passport for free.
@Niedorzecze
@Niedorzecze 4 года назад
translate.google.pl/?hl=pl#view=home&op=translate&sl=pl&tl=en&text=w%20Szczebrzeszynie%20chrz%C4%85szcz%20brzmi%20w%20trzcinie
@Niedorzecze
@Niedorzecze 4 года назад
translate.google.pl/?hl=pl#view=home&op=translate&sl=pl&tl=en&text=st%C3%B3%C5%82%20z%20powy%C5%82amywanymi%20nogami
@Niedorzecze
@Niedorzecze 4 года назад
That is better
@janbury8113
@janbury8113 4 года назад
Or 'strzelec' (eng. shooter) :)
@Purrczak
@Purrczak 4 года назад
Try Grzegorz Brzęczyszczykiewicz
@qwertyzyz
@qwertyzyz 2 года назад
Polnisch ist so ne schöne Sprache, ich will so gerne lernen
@memensziom2846
@memensziom2846 Год назад
Viel Glück! :D
@borntobesaint3733
@borntobesaint3733 Год назад
ich komme aus Polen, ich will gerne helfen
@michaelhenter2856
@michaelhenter2856 Год назад
Nun, Schönheit ist sichetlich eine ganz individuelle Empfindung. Leider finde ich die polnische Sprache eine der am wenigsten gut klingenden Sprachen Europas. Wie gesagt, mein persönliches Gefühl.
@danielszczesny6413
@danielszczesny6413 Год назад
Bro you must be masochisty to do such a think when i look at this video now i see how fucked up is my leaungue compair to other nations xd
@boryskrupa5102
@boryskrupa5102 Год назад
@@michaelhenter2856 machine guns sound much better for german ears. We are all well aware of that.
@kinddesuniversums7685
@kinddesuniversums7685 Год назад
Wspaniałe, gorgeous, herrlich... Uczenie się języka polskiego to jakieś wyzwanie i dzieło miłośników. Dzięki temu wideo rozumiem, że osiąnęłem coś. Puh!
@worldclassyoutuber2085
@worldclassyoutuber2085 Год назад
osiągnąłem*
@kinddesuniversums7685
@kinddesuniversums7685 Год назад
@@worldclassyoutuber2085 haha:) Oczywiście
@user-bb4iz7rs5p
@user-bb4iz7rs5p 5 месяцев назад
Gratuluję Ci kolego!
@kajetanp7333
@kajetanp7333 2 года назад
Im dłużej tego słucham tym bardziej się zastanawiam jakim cudem ktokolwiek nie z Polski umie mówić tym językiem
@margplsr3120
@margplsr3120 2 года назад
są dużo trudniejsze języki także... ludzie potrafią nauczyć się chińskiego czy koreańskiego nie mówiąc o innych językach także.. :D
@motorolka164
@motorolka164 2 года назад
@@margplsr3120 troche złe przykłady :) chiński ma łatwą gramatykę tylko pismo to zajęcie do końca życia, koreański jest inny od naszego, ale alfabet jest jak cyryliza tylko zapisywany z bloczkach sylabowych temu dziwnie wygląda. Trudnośc języka to raczej jak daleko jest od naszego. Masz np jezyk mlaskany w afryce. Angielski też do super łatwych dla nas nie jest. W polskim uwielbiam jak przed odmiany i słowotwórstwo łatwo się wyrazić :D
@krzysztofjozwiak8710
@krzysztofjozwiak8710 2 года назад
@@motorolka164 Jako Polak podzielam tą opinię w 100% - (tzn. co do chińskiego i koreańskiego też, ale to już po prostu znajomość faktów). Ale to prawda, że w naszym języku można powiedzieć to samo na wiele różnych sposobów, również dzięki neologizmom, z których bardzo obficie się korzysta, nie tylko w mowie potocznej, ale i w literaturze, oczywiście w poezji szczególnie. Ale nasz ortografia! O rety... ucze się jej całe życie... jak Chińczycy swoich znaków :)
@motorolka164
@motorolka164 2 года назад
@@krzysztofjozwiak8710 mi się ortografia poprawiła w którym momencie w którym zaczęłam dużo czytać i pisząc wizualnie wiedziałam, że dobrze wybrałam. niestety przez internet mam obecnie problem z niektórymi słowami które co chwilę ktoś odkrywa na nowo w zapisie np skąd :D
@krzysztofjozwiak8710
@krzysztofjozwiak8710 2 года назад
@@motorolka164 - czy dobrze zrozumiałem, że jesteś Chinką? Jak by nie było, wygląda na to, że masz o wiele większą zdolność do języków niż ja :) nawet do mojego własnego :) :) :) A, tak nawiasem mówiąc - zachęcam swoje dzieci do nauki Mandaryńskiego. W przyszłym roku po prostu postawię im ultimatum! Pozdrawiam Serdecznie!
@peternagy6067
@peternagy6067 4 года назад
Lengyel magyar két jó barát 🇭🇺♥️🇵🇱 Brothers forever Respect form Hungary
@olucha5678
@olucha5678 4 года назад
Polak, Węgier, dwa bratanki, i do szabli, i do szklanki 😭❤️❤️
@TheShekerrr
@TheShekerrr 4 года назад
@hrl_dvdsn
@hrl_dvdsn 4 года назад
Love from Poland bro! ♥
@lck_1802
@lck_1802 4 года назад
I'm from Poland you are from Hungary. You are not my friends you are my brothers my friends! "PashaBiceps"
@marekk2979
@marekk2979 4 года назад
Thanks mate
@87velen
@87velen Год назад
One of the distinctive features of Polish is a clear difference between formal and informal speech - every time you speak with an adult stranger, business relations (clients, but also suppliers) and many other cases, you use Mr. or Mrs. forms - Pan, Pani. This influences also the way the sentence is constructed, changing the verb to 3rd person even if the subject of the sentence is in 2nd person. For example, "idziesz do kina?" is a question "are you going to cinema", while if we use Pan/Pani, "Idzie Pani do kina?" or "Czy idzie Pani do kina?" verb "iść" (to go) changes from 2nd person "idziesz" to 3rd person "idzie"
@user-pk9qo1gd6r
@user-pk9qo1gd6r Год назад
While this is a feature, it is not a distinctive feature at all.
@michastepien8326
@michastepien8326 Год назад
But that is in German, too. You can address some else as Du (you) or Sie (they) -- Sie is quite formal counterpart of Polish Pan/Pani.
@aszynbeher
@aszynbeher Год назад
Więcej nauczyłem o swoim języku z filmiku po angielsku, niż przez 9 lat nauki polskiego w szkole :D
@IthliniEllyanSenah
@IthliniEllyanSenah Год назад
No to nie ma się czym chwalić, bo to wiedza ze szkoły podstawowej :I
@maciejfratczak4136
@maciejfratczak4136 Год назад
widocznie obcokrajowcy spoglądają nań bardziej pragmatycznie. Ciekawe jest rozróżnienie czasowników w kategoriach przeszłość - nieprzeszłość.
@Kirito865
@Kirito865 Год назад
​@@IthliniEllyanSenah Fakt jest taki, że dla przeciętnego człowieka to nie ma większego znaczenia, chyba że bierze udział w zawodach związanych z językoznawstwem. W pewnym momencie, instynktownie potrafimy pisać, czytać i mówić. Ja sam zacząłem zwracać uwagę na te kwestie, kiedy już osiągnąłem konkretny poziom w kilku językach, między innymi, angielskim, niemieckim teraz polski. [Jestem Japończykiem]. Robiłem to jednak tylko po to, aby móc sporządzać pewne dokumentacje, które musiały spełniać najwyższe standardy. Nadmienię, że przeczytałem blisko 250 książek po polsku, każda miała od 300 do 1000 stron. Obejrzałem setki filmów, grałem w dziesiątki gier i codziennie czytam polskie portale. Dopiero teraz do tego podchodzę, bo mam zamiar również sporządzać i tłumaczyć dokumentacje na język polski. Myślę, mimo iż nigdy nie zacząłem się uczyć tych zasad, to jest zrozumiały i całkiem poprawny ortograficznie, interpunkcyjnie, gramatycznie i składniowo, choć nie jest idealnie.
@fikujez
@fikujez Год назад
​@@IthliniEllyanSenahbyło, pamiętam jak mając 10-11 lat musiałem się uczyć tych rzeczy i kompletnie nie rozumiałem jak to działa (ani dlaczego się o tym uczę). Może teraz podstawa programowa się zmieniła, nie wiem, ale za moich czasów gramatyka była o wiele za wcześnie.
@opabinnier
@opabinnier 11 месяцев назад
OMG. Shocking!
@amjan
@amjan 4 года назад
You missed THE GREATEST THING about Polish - its super powerful and and productive MORPHOLOGY!!!! Words (nounds, adjectives) can be made and modified by a plethora of affixes and suffixes to add and express all kinds of qualities, attitudes, emotions, moods etc. See here: żaba - a frog żab - a frog (masculine) żabka - a little frog żabek - a little frog (masculine) żabiątko - a baby frog (adoring) żabeczka - a tiny frog żabeczek - as above but masculine żabcia - a sweet little frog żabcia - a sweet little baby frog żabusia - an even sweeter little frog (affectionate) żabuś - as above but masculine żabula - a frog you find cute (adoring) żabulka - as above but sweeter żabucha - an unwieldy or ugly frog żabczysko - a bad frog (resentful) żabisko - an fugly frog (hateful) żabica - a hatefully feminine frog You can come up with tens of these ;)) And you can do even more with verbs!!
@KonradNowotarski
@KonradNowotarski 4 года назад
amjan Exactly, well spotted, except perhaps“żabuś” or “żab” :))
@amjan
@amjan 4 года назад
@@KonradNowotarski No no no, not except. You hear żabuś and you know what it is.
@DuanesMind
@DuanesMind 4 года назад
Żabka - Where you can buy food on Sundays
@SzalonyKucharz
@SzalonyKucharz 4 года назад
@@Fenditokesdialect A mistaken undertaker ordered fried shitake at a local takeaway.
@Ecolinguist
@Ecolinguist 4 года назад
@@KonradNowotarski "żabuś"sounds quite natural to me. Never heard "żab" though. 🤔
@johnpark7416
@johnpark7416 3 года назад
Jestem Koreanczykiem uczacym sie polskiego
@JS-os5bl
@JS-os5bl 3 года назад
Wow! You're really good.
@nonperson22
@nonperson22 3 года назад
Good luck 😉
@TheOstry322
@TheOstry322 3 года назад
Jak ci idzie?
@Nikifor_92
@Nikifor_92 3 года назад
Ogólnie jestem pod wrażeniem tego jak Azjaci szybko uczą się polskiego i przy tym nie popełniają błędów językowych. Niektórzy po paru latach nauki nawet nabywają polski akcent, szok.
@JS-os5bl
@JS-os5bl 3 года назад
Czy jest jakiś cień szansy, że znajdę żonę Koreankę? Jeśli nie, to biorę inną Azjatkę, bo bardzo mi się podobają.
@wetbear1968
@wetbear1968 Год назад
Thanks for the first comprehensive and comprehensible explanation of the verb aspect I've ever come across. Dziękuję bardzo 🙂
@art6449
@art6449 7 месяцев назад
Really nice move. But I see a small mistake: the dative form of the word "matka" in polish is "matce". The word matke does not exist in Polish language, there is only "matkę". :-) But nevertheless great move, I appreciate your effort to deep dive into the Polish language! :-)
@Yukitocyborg
@Yukitocyborg 4 года назад
I accidently installed Windows in Polish instead of Portuguese, there are still some words that are in Polish even though I changed the system language. I don't have a headphone, I have a Glósniki. I am almost fluent....
@The0Stroy
@The0Stroy 4 года назад
Głośniki are "speakers" Słuchawki are "headphones"
@yahya_elistinsary
@yahya_elistinsary 4 года назад
@@The0Stroy To Russians speaker some Polish words sound very funny because they take a know root en and change it to make it sound funny. Glosniki is maybe from golas en golas is voice Sluchawki is from sluchat to listen. If you would say this to a Russian person we would understand what would be mean.
@Grzegoo
@Grzegoo 4 года назад
@@The0Stroy give the guy a break, it's windows.
@dzejrid
@dzejrid 4 года назад
@@Grzegoo break. Nie ma za co ;)
@jarlfenrir
@jarlfenrir 4 года назад
@@yahya_elistinsary Głośniki comes from "głos". Głos means a voice in polish. Golas in polish means a naked person :P
@msmichellewinchester
@msmichellewinchester 4 года назад
I'm Czech and basically this whole video, especially when he talked about the grammar, I was like: "Same. Same. Same. Same." :D Also, thumbs up for recognizing central Europe is a thing.
@TheWoodenshark
@TheWoodenshark 4 года назад
Hey you guys also have no vowel monsters like prst and strć. Easy for other slavic people to pronounce, absolute monstrosity for westerners.
@msmichellewinchester
@msmichellewinchester 4 года назад
@@TheWoodenshark Yeah, those are fun :D. That's because we kind of see r and l as half vowels. So then you have have things like "vlk zhlt prst a zdrh" which most English speakers would probably not believe is a full sentence :D.
@TheWoodenshark
@TheWoodenshark 4 года назад
Ok that one is pretty hardcore but one round of listening on google translate and I'm good. But still, this is insane.
@msmichellewinchester
@msmichellewinchester 4 года назад
@@TheWoodenshark I admire anyone who's learning Czech or any Slavic language. Learning another language is hard enough and especially one outside of your language family. Learning our insane grammar and consonant clusters is another level. But hey, at least we don't have articles :D.
@krzysztof-ratajczyk
@krzysztof-ratajczyk 4 года назад
@@msmichellewinchester "the same" - and this is the most beautiful, nejkrásnější :D
@andrzejwilkoszewski7850
@andrzejwilkoszewski7850 Год назад
I randomly came across this video and I like it very much. You've focused on grammar of Polish language. However, there is also the ability to enrich vocabulary by adding prefixes that is quite a big part of the language. For example simple word "jechać" (to go) can have extra meaning by adding prefixes Wjechać - go in, go up Zjechać - go down Wyjechać - go out Przyjechać - arrive Przejechać - go over smth, pass by Odjechać - leave Zajechać - come in Wyjechać - go somewhere The similar rule may be applied to most verbs.
@keithkoganeislife3144
@keithkoganeislife3144 4 года назад
English speaker: How hard is Polish? Polish speaker: Tak
@user-yd8fn1iz3v
@user-yd8fn1iz3v 4 года назад
*Polisz spikier: KURWA!
@WrzodX
@WrzodX 4 года назад
"Tak" can be translated as "so much".
@_Killkor
@_Killkor 4 года назад
Polish speaker: No No, as "yeah". It's a very informal alternative to "tak".
@vinny9868
@vinny9868 4 года назад
Slightly easier than English. And English is a hell of a language.
@pepe72x
@pepe72x 4 года назад
AFAIR it is Group 4.
@0Fecske0
@0Fecske0 4 года назад
„Polak, Węgier, dwa bratanki, i do szabli, i do szklanki.” Greetings from Hungary.
@RetroDiamond07
@RetroDiamond07 4 года назад
Júlia Polyákné Kelemen thanks brothers grettings from Poland too!
@danielkobos3609
@danielkobos3609 4 года назад
Ria ria Hungaria! Greetings grom Poland
@josephlombardo5711
@josephlombardo5711 4 года назад
Thank you Julia for a nice words greetings from Poland:)
@jestemjoy
@jestemjoy Год назад
Thank you so much for your content! Your explanations blow my mind. You are so knowledgeable and manage to simplify even the most challenging topics! Well done!
@michalachmatowicz6083
@michalachmatowicz6083 2 года назад
17:02 - numbers _ending_ in 1-4 have different forms depending on the case and gender of the noun. E.g. jedna muszelka (1 shell), dwie, trzy, cztery muszelki (2, 3, 4 shells), piec, szesc, siedem,.. muszelek (5, 6, 7, ... shells). However, czerdziesci dwie muszelki (42 shells, same as 2), but czerdziesci piec muszelek (45 shells, same as 5). Very interesting for a native speaker nearly 40 years after my last grammar class. Did not realize this until started to think about it.
@walterweiss7124
@walterweiss7124 Год назад
podzial podobnie jest w rosyjskim
@boryskrupa5102
@boryskrupa5102 Год назад
stop giving these pornographic examples!
@elaowczarczyk7143
@elaowczarczyk7143 4 года назад
No one: Absolutely no one: Poles: *Grzegorz Brzęczyszczykiewicz*
@nomtbg
@nomtbg 4 года назад
Urodzony Chrząszczyżewoszyce, powiat Łękołody 😀
@csweezey18
@csweezey18 4 года назад
We call that "consonant soup."
@dziadek.b575
@dziadek.b575 4 года назад
W Szczebrzeszynie chrząszcz brzmi w trzcinie ;)
@rufusx98
@rufusx98 4 года назад
​@@dziadek.b575 I Szczebrzeszyn z tego słynie. ;3
@sharkinahat
@sharkinahat 4 года назад
Funny, except when your name is actually Grzegorz. These days, I just tell people my name is Greg.
@pualamnusantara7903
@pualamnusantara7903 4 года назад
5 minutes in : I love the history of the Polish language ! 10 minutes in : The ortoghraphy is a bit complicated, but that's pretty good! 11 minutes in : Polish has both singular and plural nouns and all of them have masculine, feminine, and neutral form? Well a bit hard but still acceptable. 15 minutes in : see *verb conjugation* and *noun cases* and tons of different form (dizzy) 20 minutes in : Wszyscy? HOW DO YOU PRONOUNCE THAT???!! 22 minutes in : Alright. Life's is too short to learn Polish. Also : Grzegorz Brzęczyszczykiewicz : **Laughs in Polish**
@michakubiak9922
@michakubiak9922 4 года назад
Speaking of verbs conjugation the verb "czytać" for example, which means "to read" has total of 110 forms depending on the part of the speech (including tenses, conditional and participles). So, yes it's very confusing for the foreigners.
@mateuszwenderski6779
@mateuszwenderski6779 4 года назад
oh come on, two years old children usually can speak Polish fluently :)
@dandanovich6729
@dandanovich6729 4 года назад
Fellow Russian reaction here: 5 mins: Well. Better forget that part 10 mins: Why 11 mins: Now we're talking 15 mins: A little bit outdated. We've got rid of many of those centuries ago. Now we have it more modern. And more complex (LAUGHS IN ГРАММАТИКА) 20 mins: вшисци 22 mins: I will never learn it anyway Гжегош Бженчишчикевич
@clairebear0713
@clairebear0713 4 года назад
Yes.
@hatridmunpitaa
@hatridmunpitaa 4 года назад
[f-shis-tsih]
@elwillypeinado
@elwillypeinado 5 месяцев назад
It's important to remember that native speakers do never study grammar. We should just get inmmersed in the language. Languages were developed to acquire them, not to be studied, unless you want to be a teacher or a writer. I mean is always good to have some grammar knowledge, but you may not think about it when you're having a conversation.
@Holms
@Holms 2 года назад
Please do a vid about Lithuanian and Latvian languages. These have completely separate language family. Which I believe makes these languages unique. Also in Lithuania there žemaičių language/dialect and tuteišų which I think is absolutely separate language mixed between polish, Belarus, Russian and Lithuanian altogether, its like hearing a sentence in all for languages all together.
@Ruunawayboy
@Ruunawayboy Год назад
I agree in 100% The Lithuanian language is one of the oldest Slavic languages with its roots in ancient times
@michastepien8326
@michastepien8326 Год назад
@@Ruunawayboy Lithuanian is not Slavic language.
@stink-man
@stink-man 3 года назад
80% ludzi którzy to oglądają są Polakami ktuży dostali ten filmik w rekomendacji. (w ten sposób znalazłem ten filmik)
@Alleysss
@Alleysss 3 года назад
Yes this is true lol
@alyzmistaken1
@alyzmistaken1 3 года назад
indeed
@mjango3632
@mjango3632 3 года назад
YES TAK
@gamefan1019
@gamefan1019 3 года назад
Tak na pewno Yes definitely
@elnexarip5099
@elnexarip5099 3 года назад
true.
@tamas8889
@tamas8889 4 года назад
Polak, Węgier, dwa bratanki, i do szabli, i do szklanki. Lengyel, magyar - két jó barát, együtt harcol, s issza borát.🇭🇺🇵🇱❤️
@Turagrong
@Turagrong 4 года назад
Ha ha, 9 likes only for now!
@elevenfifteen1115
@elevenfifteen1115 4 года назад
Borat Sagdiyev? A Kazakhstani journalist?
@siratshi455
@siratshi455 4 года назад
Oba zuchy oba zwawy Niech im Pan Bóg Błagosławy! I'm Irish, didn't even know how I get that, but I was just randomly searching Wikipedia and found "polish-hungarian relations and even learnt it out) Polish is amazing.
@WrzodX
@WrzodX 4 года назад
@@siratshi455 It's spelled "żwawi (...) błogosławi".
@user-cj9rk3vs1w
@user-cj9rk3vs1w 4 года назад
@@siratshi455 wow! ;)
@jarekzawadzki
@jarekzawadzki Год назад
Actually, the perfective verb used in the past means not only that the action has been completed, but also that the goal of the action has been accomplished, i.e. „przeczytałem” means I finished reading and I have read the book to the end.
@bartekjaszczyk1974
@bartekjaszczyk1974 Год назад
Bravo for this film, it had to take you al lot more time and energy to make it. Thank you.
@aleksanderstepniak960
@aleksanderstepniak960 4 года назад
"Poland is Central Europe" - that's right Paul. All Polish happy, no one complains in the comments.
@bezcz
@bezcz 4 года назад
Becouse its geographically correct. As Sławomir Mrożek said: on the east from west and west of east (na wchód od zachodu i na zachód od wschodu)
@pumcia718
@pumcia718 4 года назад
I was so happy that someone finally got it right.
@andrzejklein7846
@andrzejklein7846 4 года назад
Poland is an Eastern European country located in Central Europe.
@p.s.1907
@p.s.1907 4 года назад
Poland is in central Europe.
@nick-.t
@nick-.t 4 года назад
poland is the centre of the universe
@alterego3633
@alterego3633 4 года назад
Maybe it's just me but I find it so adorable that Poles are so happy whenever somebody talks about their language
@szyszszysz2062
@szyszszysz2062 4 года назад
well yea :D
@VoCiech
@VoCiech 4 года назад
Yeah pretty much this. But it's basically everywhere not only on youtube or just internet lol
@zuzannawalczak8178
@zuzannawalczak8178 4 года назад
Maybe that's because our leanguage isn't very popular in other countries. Many peoples are talking in Spanish, German, French and English (of course).
@vinceyo5073
@vinceyo5073 4 года назад
So do I but as a Pole I can tell you that's sometimes annoying when some famous person mentions Poland and everyone in the country is screaming OH MY GOD SOMEONE SAID SOMETHING ABOUT MY COUNTRY. Same thing is when Pole sees a polish name in the starring captions at the end of a movie OMG HIS LAST NAME SOUNDS LIKE POLISH OH MY OH MY. But just for the records I am a bit excited too, maybe not as the example I gave you few second ago but it's always cool to see that there are people who ain't polish and yet consider Poland great country. Hell it took loads of time to type that xd
@maugustyniak
@maugustyniak 4 года назад
I find it extremely suspicious and cannot help but think that our language is far too simple.
@whiteink225
@whiteink225 2 года назад
About the "nie ma" part at the end. It comes from the old polish form "nie masz ci" which means something like "you don't have him/her/it here". For example: "Nie ma go tu" would be "nie masz ci go" (you don't have him here). It was eventually shortened into "nie ma".
@mahrcheen
@mahrcheen Год назад
Great video! This is explained so well I'm actually shocked why anyone would put so much effort into knowing our language. Most of us know english so the barrier is not so big. As a Pole I would add a one small additional info to emphasize meaning of 'przeczytać' (perfective non past of read). Przeczytam actually means 'I will have it read in unspecified time, but I will, I promise, I have will to get it done' not just 'będę czytać' which exactly means 'I will read, I will be doing that but i don't know if I finish'. Przeczytałem means 'I finished the book' not just 'I finished the action of reading' which is 'czytałem' - 'I was reading, I finished that action but I did not finish the book'. The same with 'naprawię/ naprawiłem' and 'będę naprawiać/naprawiałem' (I promise to to finish the reparations/I repaired and I will be repairing/I was repairing). This is some kind of thinking about the future like it is already a past but more in sense of willing or expecting than being certain. It's like you see a car speeding towards a guy walking on the road looking into smartphone. You say 'kierowca przejedzie go zaraz' meaning 'the driver will be in a state of having him ran over already in a second'. You are almost sure it will happen having limited info. Or something like that. It's not so obvious all the time; Apart from video declinations are generally a bit easier than in latin but with many new symbols it gets even, I guess. Good thing we nowadays don't use past perfect or latin plusquamperfectum on a daily basis. But books, poetry and old people still can use it sometimes which is funny because many Poles even don't understand it. Examples: Now we say 'znikłem z oczu' - "I (or I had ) disappeared from sight(from eyes)' But some elders could say 'znikłem byłem z oczu' which exactly means 'I had disappeared from sight(from eyes)' But in polish it is not 'have' but 'to be' so person says 'I disappeared I was from the sight' it's just strange for unused people; And this pro-drop is very common. Normally we don't use 'Ja' 'I' while talking as it is obvious who from just the verb. We only use 'I' when we need to emphasize that it is myself who does something or list who did what. This is dead giveaway to tell the non native speakers as it's more like a instinct not a rule. Also we have cases of talking in third person which conveys either respect or lack of respect, or talking in plural forms. For example if you tell someone 'usiądzie' 'he/she will sit' but without saying who (3rd p. perfective non past as mentioned above) that actually is treated as an order from someone having even slightly more power over us. Used mostly in hospitals by nurses. But if you say 'Mamusia usiądzie' while talking to your Mum it means 'Mommy please sit'. You can say 'usiądzie' to someone while talking about someone other who is going to sit and this would be just as normal. Next thing is the plural form like pluralis maiestatis. It also conveys respect but I think not so much as it was used both by nobles and by communists. It's just more formal way from old times. In english 'you' is both singular and plural so you don't see difference. Last thing I wanted to mention is talking to someone in third person plural form. This is almost extinct I think but you can say to your grandmother 'Babcia usiądą' and treat one person as 'they' with utmost respect asking your grandmother to sit down. Also in english there would be no difference because verbs sound the same in every person singular and plural. These quirks can be confusing especially when non binary people are trying to change meanings of long established terms because they don't even know the're established
@DaleyCZLP
@DaleyCZLP 4 года назад
I am Czech, and I can recognize basically all the grammar rules and example sentences here. The only difference, which makes our languages unintelligible (kind of) are the words, that were borrowed from different languages. Our languages are therefore very close! Zdravím všechny Poláky z Česka!
@Aciek25
@Aciek25 4 года назад
And the same last sentence in Polish would be: Pozdrawiam wszystkich Polaków z Czech! Quite similar for me.
@Robertoslaw.Iksinski
@Robertoslaw.Iksinski 4 года назад
I'm Polish and you're right Jestem Polakiem i masz rację (in latinised "modern Polish" ) Jeśm Polak i masz prawdę (in Old Polish) Jsem Polák a máš pravdu (in Czech) Zdravím všechny Čechy z Polska!
@FrikInCasualMode
@FrikInCasualMode 4 года назад
Shovel = "szpadel" in Polish, "rypadlo ipadlo" in Czech. "Rypadło ypadełko" = crude slang nickname for bed in Polish(from "rypać" - crude slang word for sex). Many a Czech elicited surprised snort of laughter from a Pole who hears this word not knowing the real meaning. We just can't help it, and we are usually very sorry for it - but many perfectly normal Czech words sound very amusing to us, Poles.
@danieldabczak1240
@danieldabczak1240 4 года назад
@@FrikInCasualMode Now's my turn. You, poles, use one word - Szukać/šukat all the time. It means to fuck in czech. In Harry Potter saga Harry plays a seeker (in czech chytač - "catcher"). In polish it's szukający (šukající - a person who is fucking someone right now). So funny. haha Besides shovel is "lopata" not rypadlo. I hadn't known what is rypadlo until some polak told me it's so funny, then I found out it's "bagr"
@nextghost
@nextghost 4 года назад
@@FrikInCasualMode Shovel is called "lopata" in Czech. "Rypadlo" is an excavator. Also: In Polish, "szukać" = to look for something In Czech, "šukat" = to fuck
@MasterTaster
@MasterTaster 4 года назад
As a native Russian speaker, I have to admit the Polish language is absolutely adorable, it basically has a sort of ASMR effect on me, especially ,when ladies talk, it’s just smooth and calms me down like no other language. Hope to visit Poland one day. Za wolność Naszą i Waszą 🤝
@katarzynaborzecka6458
@katarzynaborzecka6458 4 года назад
Nice to hear! As a Polish, I never learned Russian, but from the time I started to speak Serbian fluently - I understand a lot from Russian now :D it's very melodic and I generally like Slavic languages, but I have to admit: those extra vowels (moloko vs mleko, golova vs glava/głowa) and different pronunciation of THE SAME letter in THE SAME word - makes mi crazy :D
@maksymilianpiwowarczyk5450
@maksymilianpiwowarczyk5450 4 года назад
I speak Russian and when i visited Russia first time some nice old lady said that for sure I came from Poland, cause only Poles can speak Russian almost good like native spikers. But some characteristic accent betrays our nationality. My favourite word which sounds great is : "Спортивная площадка".
@maugustyniak
@maugustyniak 4 года назад
@@katarzynaborzecka6458 Nie wspieraj podrywaczy.
@ceebee3083
@ceebee3083 4 года назад
Many people in here say that Russian is the most beautiful language for the poetry.
@tolep
@tolep 4 года назад
I was driver for the young Russian family (parennts and two kindergarten kids) in Poland. I was amazed how Russian language sounds in this kind of family talks.
5 месяцев назад
I love both the video and the comments! You guys are incredible! Take care
@cetus4449
@cetus4449 Год назад
3:30 Also in Russia, the Polish language was popular in the 16th and 17th centuries, and in the times of King Sobieski, the Kremlin spoke, read and dressed in Polish style, because that was trendy, until the reign of Peter I. According to the account of the Dominican friar Francesco Piscopo (the 1660s) Polish was second in importance language of the Crimea after Ottoman Turkish.
@Laia92
@Laia92 4 года назад
Me, an Italian girl: I have to go to Olsztyn in October for my Erasmus project, let's learn Polish to make new friends! Me after learning alphabet pronunciation and a few words: I... mustn't... give up...
@wiessiew9853
@wiessiew9853 3 года назад
I have read that Italians learn Polish easiest of all from West Europe
@89Sawik
@89Sawik 3 года назад
@@wiessiew9853 They still learn latin in schools, so inflections are more understandable for them ;) Italian colleague told me.
@gumkaczka6222
@gumkaczka6222 3 года назад
hah I'm from Olsztyn in Poland
@Laia92
@Laia92 3 года назад
@@89Sawik Not in all schools latin is studied, I didn't and never studied cases. But I'm learning Polish bit by bit, and I already can tell simple sentences. I'm in Poland now and I've seen Olsztyn, Gdańsk, Warszawa, Malbork castle, and a few other places. I really love your country!
@fabiolagiorgio839
@fabiolagiorgio839 3 года назад
@@wiessiew9853 I guess so, it seems like we're engaged with many of them LOL
@koxtheknight7087
@koxtheknight7087 2 года назад
I'm a simple hungarian man. I see Poland, i clikc. Cheers from hungary, brother! 🇭🇺❤🇵🇱
@tari0725
@tari0725 Год назад
Lengyel, magyar - két jó barát, együtt harcol, s issza borát🧡
@truebastard9687
@truebastard9687 Год назад
thanks lad, im polish and i have a rather good friend from hungary
@marekeos
@marekeos Год назад
I'm polish and when I hear the Hungarian language I simply raise the white flag :)
@shateq
@shateq Год назад
Cheers from Poland!
@szymonzagraba2956
@szymonzagraba2956 Год назад
Węgier
@BigRobChicagoPL
@BigRobChicagoPL 7 месяцев назад
Both my parents ran away from Poland in the 80s to Jackowo Chicago during the immigration. I am the first person in the entire family tree to be born in the United States, or even outside of Poland. For generations we were villagers and farmers, with some more notable standings on my moms side way way back. I am very thankful my parents still speak the language at home and that I learned it fluently. I hope to pass it down to my kids but I know it'll get lost over the generations in the US
@IceCenders
@IceCenders 6 месяцев назад
And I thought Russian sounded like Portuguese, but Polish definitely beats it with its nasal vowels!
@TheSuperfl
@TheSuperfl 4 года назад
As a Pole I want to say that Polish people know that their language is extremely difficult that's why they really really appreciate everyone who learns it. If you learn it don't be afraid to make mistakes, every Polish person will help you with pleasure.
@kensley94
@kensley94 4 года назад
I know they were very impressed that i could do tongue twisters :P
@abrahamberlin4519
@abrahamberlin4519 4 года назад
Usually, the people are very kind and get happy when they hear a foreigner tryng to speak their language, but this doesn't happen in all countries, for example, from what I've heard, the Americans and French can be rude if you speak their language with your native accent. 😅 But as a native Spanish speaker, my eyes shine when I hear a foreigner tryng to speak my language. 😍
@Aciek25
@Aciek25 4 года назад
@@kensley94 all of them? Grzegorz Brzęczyszczykiewicz, Chrząszczyrzewoszyce, powiat Łękołody?
@alittlebird3818
@alittlebird3818 4 года назад
@@abrahamberlin4519 Soy de alemania y aprendo español. Me encanta el idioma mucho. Yo amo la cultura de los países en español. Y un dia voy a ser fluento y vistaré los países 🙂
@abrahamberlin4519
@abrahamberlin4519 4 года назад
@@Shaun-Vargas, gracias, muchas gracias, es que de verdad he escuchado comentarios de mis paisanos que me dicen que han tenido algunos incidentes con los americanos sólo por el hecho de hablar con su acento, aunque hablen el inglés de forma gramaticalmente correcta y entendible. 😕
@kucikukan
@kucikukan 4 года назад
A niechaj narodowie wżdy postronni znają, iż Polacy nie gęsi, iż swój język mają.
@Antonio-pz2cu
@Antonio-pz2cu 4 года назад
Spierdalaj
@kucikukan
@kucikukan 4 года назад
@@Antonio-pz2cu Sprecyzuj
@Antonio-pz2cu
@Antonio-pz2cu 4 года назад
Bardzo proszę szanownego Pana o spierdalanie z sekcji komentarzy
@Antonio-pz2cu
@Antonio-pz2cu 4 года назад
Nie no, nudzi mi się po prostu. Przepraszam, nie chciałem Cię obrazić
@kucikukan
@kucikukan 4 года назад
@@Antonio-pz2cu Dziękuję szanownemu Panu za tę jakże pouczającą i merytoryczną wypowiedź Jestem pewny, że w przyszłości nasze wnuki będą się zastanawiały "co autor miał na myśli"
@tangocash342
@tangocash342 Год назад
I speak Bosnian language, and my language has a lot of similarities with Polish but due to spelling rules it is most difficult Slavic language for me. 😢
@ivayola
@ivayola Год назад
As a Bulgarian, I can relate 🙂
@misiek_xp4886
@misiek_xp4886 11 месяцев назад
Waiting for Serbs claiming you speak Serbian lmao
@JoaoVitor-wp9zg
@JoaoVitor-wp9zg 11 месяцев назад
Serbian dialect*
@misiek_xp4886
@misiek_xp4886 11 месяцев назад
@@JoaoVitor-wp9zg lmao
@tangocash342
@tangocash342 9 месяцев назад
@@misiek_xp4886 Jadnici ne znaju da zapravo govore bosanski.
@jaro7180
@jaro7180 Год назад
Teraz wiem dlaczego byłem słaby z matematyki... Zwyczajnie brakowało miejsca w pamięci po lekcjach z j. Polskiego 😅 Geez! Respect to anyone learning our crazy language. Espacially people outside our slavic tribe. Fun fact. Poles quite easly can speak with Czech, Slovak, Croatian, and many more. It's kinda funny cause those are different languages but if we will speak slow and clear we will understand each other. I remeber when I was in Croatia and I was trying to comunicate in english (interantional language after all) and thay were like "cmon dude! Stop foolin and just speak Polish" 😅
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