@@Quarantina237 Alright! So, first of all - don't worry about getting them all correctly every time because more often than not a native speaker will be able to understand you regardless. Probably the best way to learn all that is to either listen to native speakers a lot or read books because Polish is very, very irregular in that regard as you've probably already noticed.
@@Quarantina237 But, there are some pointers in the seven grammatical cases. For example, "Po marcu przychodzi kwiecień." (After March comes April.) We know to use "marcu" here instead of "marzec" because "po" comes with locative (miejscownik), which answers to questions "about who? about what?" (o kim? o czym? in Polish). See that "u"? A lot of words (but not all of them, it all depends unfortunately), will be ending with "u" if we use locative. Try putting in "Grammatical cases in Polish" and all will be better explained there! But try not to make a habit of relying on them all the time, listening/reading while the hardest is the best way because it allows you to remember set phrases that are used the most often without breaking everything down grammtically all the time. EDIT. I used the wrong one, LMAO. So, yeah, they're difficult as heck.
Powodzonka!
Respect
Good luck!
Im trying to learn Polish on Duo too but I need help figuring out the cases, any tips? I often have to guess in my lessons
Could you give an example of what troubles you? Maybe I’ll be able to give you some tips! :)
@ when to use herbate vs herbata or zupa vs zupe, smaczny vs smaczne. Kwetniu vs kwicien
@@Quarantina237 Alright! So, first of all - don't worry about getting them all correctly every time because more often than not a native speaker will be able to understand you regardless. Probably the best way to learn all that is to either listen to native speakers a lot or read books because Polish is very, very irregular in that regard as you've probably already noticed.
@fictionalcharacter715 thanks!!
@@Quarantina237 But, there are some pointers in the seven grammatical cases. For example, "Po marcu przychodzi kwiecień." (After March comes April.) We know to use "marcu" here instead of "marzec" because "po" comes with locative (miejscownik), which answers to questions "about who? about what?" (o kim? o czym? in Polish). See that "u"? A lot of words (but not all of them, it all depends unfortunately), will be ending with "u" if we use locative. Try putting in "Grammatical cases in Polish" and all will be better explained there! But try not to make a habit of relying on them all the time, listening/reading while the hardest is the best way because it allows you to remember set phrases that are used the most often without breaking everything down grammtically all the time.
EDIT. I used the wrong one, LMAO. So, yeah, they're difficult as heck.
Im polish person and im shocked u got like and sub!
THANKS!