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The Polish language - it's bloody hard!


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posts: 150
Arien [Guest]
  Apr 10, 07, 17:17  #31

Quoting: Wolfie
Ok ive been told in a sense that i dont give anything towards this forum, so im going to learn Polish, its hard but i will get there and thats my contribution.


Hey, I don't know who has told you that but that's rubbish. You are who you are and you contribute enough if you're positive. But hey, it's always a good thing to learn something new Wolfie.

Polski jest bardzo trudny.. Powodzenia! Hoping I've got that one right though.

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ArturSzastak
  Apr 10, 07, 18:21  #32

Quoting: Wolfie
Francesca ya never to old to learn



Even on your death bed????

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michals girl [Guest]
  Apr 11, 07, 12:18  #33

I am trying to learn Polish, also. I've basically got the pronunciation down, and trying hard to work on vocabulary. I'm going to tackle grammar soon. I'm learning it for my boyfriend, and he keeps wanting me to talk to him in Polish, use some of the phrases I know, but I'm sorta embarrassed, I feel like he'll think it's cute, but I'm butchering it!

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xXlisaXx
  Apr 11, 07, 14:46  #34

I'd like to learn Polish and have found a free download website called 'Before You Know It' It gives you flash cards with common words and phrases and also sound (which i have found very usefull) but it only covers a little bit and i would like to learn more. Has any one got any ideas as to were i can get audio tapes that will help me but not tell me how to book a hotel room or which way to the airport. Thats not really any use to me i want to learn everyday words and phrases and how to pronounce them properly. ta X

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Posts: 262
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Ska [Guest]
  Apr 17, 07, 15:15  #35

You can buy programs like rosetta stone, if you want to fork out that kind of money.. I'm trying to find cheaper ways to learn it myself

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telefonitika
  Apr 17, 07, 15:28  #36

Quoting: xXlisaXx
Thats not really any use to me i want to learn everyday words and phrases and how to pronounce them properly


i only have what i have handed to me at college by the tutor Angelika i could photocopy you some of it and send onto you lisa if you wished we've covered different areas etc

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telefonitika
  Apr 17, 07, 15:29  #37

Quoting: Arien
Polski jest bardzo trudny


polish is very hard! would i be right?

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sophie1080 [Guest]
  Apr 21, 07, 22:07  #38

I would like to learn some Polish words? How do you say hello?

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telefonitika
Edited by: telefonitika  Apr 22, 07, 06:31  #39

Quoting: sophie1080
How do you say hello


it is cześć
pronounced as cheshch

sophie1080 invest in a good phrasebook (lonely planets) has all the phonetic soundings in it and all the greetings etc

good morning/afternoon is dzień dobry (djen do-bri)
good evening is dobry wieczór (do-bri vye-choor)

goodbye is do widzenia (do vee-dze-nya)
good night is dobranoc (do-bra-nots)
see you later is do zobaczenia (do zo-ba-che-nya)

excuse me is przepraszam (pshe-pra-sham)
please is proszę (pro-she)
thank you is dziękuje (djen-koo-ye)
thank you very much is dziękuje bardzo (djen-koo-ye bar-dzo)

how are you is Jak się masz? (yak she mash)
pleased to meet you is Bardzo miło mi (bar-dzo mee-wo me)

i guess that should help you somewhat!

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Jagienka [Guest]
  Apr 24, 07, 03:54  #40

Try : polish.slavic.pitt.edu/
If not the course the phrase book should be of some use.
Powodzenia!

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plg
  Apr 24, 07, 05:21  #41

Quoting: Mark3181
Quoting: plg
mark your English spelling is poor mate >STRUGGLING>PRONUNCIATION.ACHIEVE>.

who rattled your cage anyway?

Probably had a few piwo when I wrote that about three weeks ago ...how time flies (being careful to spell just for you PLG in this message !)

I was actually just starting to pick up certain words in the Polish language right at the end of my two weeks.
As I said a lot harder now I'm not hearing it everyday but improving slowly also helps that I can refer back to some Polish films I bought back and try to pick up new words too

then i've got to get my head around the Polish grammar...but one step at a time



WHO RATTLED MY CAGE ? that would had been you mate.
glad to see your spelling has improved.

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plg
  Apr 24, 07, 05:23  #42

Quoting: saffron
Quoting: Tlum, Post #3
- do you know the basic words yet? Also, Polish movies might help.

i have tried watching Roman Polanski's Knife in Water but they talk really fast!I know how to say hello and good afternoon-but my knowledge is very basic-the prounounciation of words is difficult for me to get the hang of-i can write things in polish as opposed to saying them!


what about the spelling of English words Saffron like PRONUNCIATION ....

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Hueg
  Apr 24, 07, 05:38  #43

Quoting: plg
what about the spelling of English words Saffron like PRONUNCIATION ....



Don't worry about him Saff. He's just angry because he thinks that it's ok to say 'yous'.
Then again, I think they do that in Scotland apparently.

No no it's Iron Brew. They just won't listen.

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telefonitika
  Apr 24, 07, 08:27  #44

Quoting: Hueg
Iron Brew


made from something .. not had that in ages hueg!
(now gone off topic)

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Hueg
  Apr 24, 07, 08:50  #45

Made in Scotland by Girders iirc. Ahh the old Orange nectar.

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Anjelkake
  Apr 24, 07, 09:00  #46

Quoting: telefonitika
good morning/afternoon is dzień dobry (djen do-bri)
good evening is dobry wieczór (do-bri vye-choor)

goodbye is do widzenia (do vee-dze-nya)
good night is dobranoc (do-bra-nots)
see you later is do zobaczenia (do zo-ba-che-nya)

excuse me is przepraszam (pshe-pra-sham)
please is proszę (pro-she)
thank you is dziękuje (djen-koo-ye)
thank you very much is dziękuje bardzo (djen-koo-ye bar-dzo)

how are you is Jak się masz? (yak she mash)
pleased to meet you is Bardzo miło mi (bar-dzo mee-wo me)



Very cool Telefonitika! Thank you very much. I just don't know why my mother didn't use more Polish in the house when we were growing up. It was like her secret language when she didn't want us kids to know what the adults were talking about. Is that just messed up or what?

I just wanted to extend a big THANK YOU to everyone who posted links (that work) and contributed like Telefonitika did. Bravo!

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Jagna
  Apr 25, 07, 06:48  #47

guests can't share links so you need to add those www or http to them

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pol444 [Guest]
  Jan 26, 08, 23:38  #48

ah i know polish but desperately want to learn german fluently, any suggestions? teach me!!!!

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southern
Edited by: southern  Jan 27, 08, 05:26  #49

pol444 wrote:

ah i know polish but desperately want to learn german fluently, any suggestions? teach me!!!!


One basic advice is to avoid german teachers.They are the worst possible teachers since they do not take your needs and abilities into account.Moreover Germans take many things for granted that are not known to foreigners and do not bother explaining them to the latter.For example
1.German language has a specific word for every thing opposite to english where one word can mean a lot of things(eg run has 20 different meanings,rennen has only one meaning).So you have to learn the specific word that is used for the specific thing and not confuse it with another specific word used for another specific thing
2.German syntax is very complicated.You need to learn which verbs need dativ,which accusativ,how to use verben mit prepositionalem objekt etc.Germans will never teach you syntax,they teach only grammar because they take it for granted that foreigners know german syntax, ,since Germans have been taught only grammar in school.

So my advice would be sth like
1.Memorize about 2000-4000 words for casual conversation
2.Memorize 100-200 verben mit prepositionalem objekt to be able to build sentences without mistakes(they are the equivalents of phrasal verbs in english very important in speech but Germans do not care to teach them as English do)
3.Memorize 100-200 funktionsverben to make good impression that you have grasp of the language(you gain some german flavour in speech by that)
4.Learn syntax very well by memorizing categories of verbs needing accusativ,etc
5.Learn grammar.

Of all the above the Germans will teach you only grammar and some vocabulary.They are not supposed to teach you syntax,verben mit prepositionalem objekt,funktionsverben.
If you ask them what should I do to improve my german and not make so many mistakes they will answer to you,read newspapers and books in german.They think you have to try yourself as well to be motivated,not wanting everything ready in advance.

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Guest
  Apr 19, 08, 23:49  #50

Most people I've met have found Polish to be the hardest language they've ever encountered.

To southern: What the hell are you talking about? German is not that complicated. Polish is definitely a lot harder.

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Marek
  Apr 20, 08, 14:23  #51

Southern,
Ennt ze tschairm'nss ssink zey shpeek maatsch better in Inglisch zenn zey duu!

Poles seem far less arrogant to me regarding the level of English they speak than do most German or Dutch speakers. Listen carefully, especially to a very young Dutchman, speaking English, and one'd think one were hearing a bad version of a grade B film noir: lots of misused slang, slurred speech and vulgarity.

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Marek
  Apr 21, 08, 12:32  #52

Guest, I 'd say that both German and Polish are equally difficult in somewhat different ways. German has article declensions along with the adjective endings, which Polish doesn't have (nor does Russian!), but Polish has a seemingly chaotic counting system, almost quixotic in its capriciousness after the number '5'. On the other hand, German counting is as boringly regular and predictable as English, yet the separable vs. inseparable verbal prefixes in German drive most foreign students of mine up a bloody wall!!

In the end, I'd say that it's tough to generalize about each language's respective difficulties. One thing's for sure, though; their respective beauty is undeniable.

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z_darius
  Apr 21, 08, 13:04  #53

southern:
German language has a specific word for every thing opposite to english where one word can mean a lot of things(eg run has 20 different meanings,rennen has only one meaning)


Polen - Poland
polen - to polarize

der Lauf : barrel, course, current, heat (in sport), muzzle, operation, running, trend, way

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BubbaWoo
  Apr 21, 08, 13:07  #54

Ausfahrt - motorway exit

ausfahrt - to break wind

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Marek
  Apr 21, 08, 15:28  #55

'German language has a specific word for everything....'


Polish has more specificity, that's true, but there are exceptions, e.g. "ćma" = shadow, death's head moth, skull and cross bones etc..

Although Bubba Woo's example of "Ausfahrt" (exit) vs. "ausfahrt" (to break wind) is plain wrong! Our good 'ol Anglo-Saxon word "fart" comes from German "furzen", no connection at all to "ausfahrt", anyway, a conjugated verb form, rather than a noun.

Trust though the latter was intended as a "double entendre"! -:) -:)

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Marek
  Apr 23, 08, 10:26  #56

I misswrote my last post! What I meant was that, in fact, Polish is LESS specific than German!! -:) sorry, guys.

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z_darius
  Apr 23, 08, 10:41  #57

Marek:
Polish is LESS specific than German!!

I dunno how this can be established. There must be some numbers to support that statement. Simple listing from dictionaries won't do either as this issue would likely be subject to the study of semantic field in regards to every meaning of the word. IMO that kind of research would be hard to automate using a computer. Lotsa work.

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BubbaWoo
  Apr 23, 08, 10:53  #58

Marek:
ABubba Woo's example of "Ausfahrt" (exit) vs. "ausfahrt" (to break wind) is plain wrong!


but proves conclusively that i have a sense of humus and therefore cannot be a piece of shredded cabbage

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Marek
  Apr 23, 08, 10:54  #59

Cute one, bubba. HA!! LOL

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Overclocked
  May 26, 08, 18:47  #60

My English is very well developed. In fact, I've had several of my stories published in local newspapers. I would think that for an English-speaker, Polish would be more difficult to learn because Polish belongs to the Slavic class of languages while German is a Germanic language just like English. The sounds of German would be more closely-related to English. Reading and writing is more difficult in Polish. Many would agree that Polish text looks a lot more intimidating than German text. I do not speak German fluently so I can't say for sure that it's more specific than Polish, however, I know Polish can definitely be very specific in some aspects. For example, in English we have the word "word" which can refer to a written word or a spoken word. In Polish we have "wyraz," which refers to a word written on paper but we also have "słowo," which refers to a word that is spoken.

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