Reaction To How to Read Polish or Something

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  • Опубликовано: 11 окт 2024
  • Reaction To How to Read Polish or Something
    This is my reaction to How to Read Polish or Something
    In this video I react to the Polish language by reacting to a funny video about how to read the Polish language and interesting Polish words.
    Original Video - • How to read Polish or ...

Комментарии • 294

  • @psow4062
    @psow4062 2 месяца назад +475

    This is certainly the most entertaining Polish language video that I've ever seen. I love the casual roasting of the English language and the part about rrrrrrrrrrrrrr.

    • @Grejlejk9
      @Grejlejk9 2 месяца назад +10

      Dobra robota

    • @chwastsz
      @chwastsz Месяц назад +3

      r is pronounced like in word butter... but in Scottish Highlands...

    • @pawetomasik5306
      @pawetomasik5306 10 дней назад +1

      I'm from Poland and I'll say something. Writing is harder

  • @TrustyEngineer
    @TrustyEngineer 2 месяца назад +386

    4:23 "Trully, English makes no sense and should be abolished!" 😆

    • @lo2rap
      @lo2rap 2 месяца назад +5

      it's true

  • @notcreativenickname2938
    @notcreativenickname2938 2 месяца назад +183

    Zajebiste. Roast na języku angielskim i całkiem niezłe wytłumaczenie większości dźwięków w języku polskim.

  • @Dexiefy
    @Dexiefy 2 месяца назад +206

    Grzegorz Brzęczyszczykiewicz. Chrząszczyżewoszyce, powiat Łękołody.
    Say this and you are basically Polish.
    We could identify anyone who pretends to be Polish just by making them say this. Even if they do manage to say this, it is nigh impossible for a foreigner to sound Polish when pronouncing this line.

    • @Gamer_PL307
      @Gamer_PL307 2 месяца назад +31

      Nazywam się Grzegorz Bręczyszczykiewicz. -You born? Chrząszczyżewoszyce powiat Łękołody.( Niemieckie załamanie)

    • @hkezbbpb
      @hkezbbpb 2 месяца назад +8

      @@Gamer_PL307 *geboren

    • @PiotrJaser
      @PiotrJaser 2 месяца назад +7

      spróbuj pogadać po szkocku.

    • @mago_8145
      @mago_8145 2 месяца назад

      ruclips.net/video/6jZhJ9yGSZw/видео.htmlsi=I5f-TAKOG0iwJsAk

    • @Qarti_5
      @Qarti_5 2 месяца назад +3

      Polska

  • @Akira_western_riding
    @Akira_western_riding 2 месяца назад +100

    I'm from Poland and i can't stop loughing 😂

    • @Awaria548
      @Awaria548 25 дней назад

      Ja też xd

    • @MR_papaja
      @MR_papaja 20 дней назад +4

      laughing*

    • @Mazak905
      @Mazak905 20 дней назад

      ja też xdddddddd

    • @Aria-lv1cl
      @Aria-lv1cl День назад +1

      wszyscy polacy to jedna rodzina

    • @Mazak905
      @Mazak905 День назад

      @@Aria-lv1cl tak, to prawda!

  • @katarzynarosinska4539
    @katarzynarosinska4539 2 месяца назад +58

    Honestly, if I hadn't been born in Poland I would never have even started learning Polish.

    • @Takemysenf
      @Takemysenf Месяц назад +8

      Thats exactly what I‘ve been saying , my whole life (and I speak several languages)

    • @poranamisiayt8839
      @poranamisiayt8839 Месяц назад +3

      same, it would be too hard for me

    • @ojtamojtam-il5zb
      @ojtamojtam-il5zb Месяц назад +5

      😂I am Polish teacher and I can tell you, it is hard, but not so hard like many people think. With a little talent and hard work foreigners make fast progress and are able to have simple conversation in few months.
      (Sorry for my English, it is not very good)

    • @Mazak905
      @Mazak905 20 дней назад

      same😆

  • @ESyta-ti7hs
    @ESyta-ti7hs 2 месяца назад +49

    I'm a Polish -English linguist, and I absolutely loved it. gonna show it to all my English friends

    • @Aliszek-p3j
      @Aliszek-p3j Месяц назад +2

      Maybe after that that you will have less of them😂 which, I hope, will not happen.

  • @Hi-five19
    @Hi-five19 2 месяца назад +470

    I’m from Poland and I love seeing people struggle with learning polish
    Edit: omg 203 is the most I ever got Ty everyone who liked

    • @mil3k
      @mil3k 2 месяца назад +26

      Pure Polishness, taking pleasure from watching people struggling to apply elbow grease to make something shiny. 😆😄🤣😂

    • @ewabudzinska3329
      @ewabudzinska3329 2 месяца назад +30

      Polish people like this comment

    • @joannanajj
      @joannanajj 2 месяца назад

      Love seeing people struggle, but it is still so cool seeing people learn polish like my friend. Stół z powyłamywanymi nogami 🙂. Dżdżownica 🪱…

    • @komanderkolo
      @komanderkolo 2 месяца назад +15

      Tak idealna rozrywka

    • @joannanajj
      @joannanajj 2 месяца назад +5

      @@komanderkolo dokładnie rozumiem jak się czujesz…

  • @matthrew
    @matthrew 2 месяца назад +33

    How to learn polish in two easy steps:
    1 pay attention.
    2 _cry._

    • @MrSmallSky
      @MrSmallSky 16 дней назад

      3 drink vodka
      4 cry some more
      I`m native so "trust me bro" it always helps (actually pt. no 3 helps with other languages as well)

  • @hideshisface1886
    @hideshisface1886 2 месяца назад +12

    Polish is a very... "phonetic" language in a sense that each letter represents a specific sound and there are rarely any exceptions, UNLESS the word comes directly from another language with very little alteration.
    Hilarious, this makes Polish very easy to read - because from the moment you can pronounce every letter, you can cobble together actual words from same exact sounds.
    There is no "shire, rooster, Worcester, Worcestershire" or "heart, beard, heard" bollocks going on here - what you see is what you read. You don't omit half the damn word in pronunciation, and pronunciation does not change depending on word.
    It is actually nicely consistent.
    Now... the grammar and writing on the other hand... that is a bloody mess. It is consistent and fairly intuitive for those who speak it, but I can get very confusing for non-native speakers.

  • @thinkpolish
    @thinkpolish 2 месяца назад +43

    I must say the Polish guy is very articulate and spot on accurate in the English explanations he makes. And he's hilarious 😂😂

  • @Lola_in_the_Black
    @Lola_in_the_Black 2 месяца назад +22

    It's a really great video explaining in a simple way how to pronounce Polish letters :)
    I would only say that while "ą" is written like "a" with a tail, it sounds more like "o" but it's just a detail :)

  • @Carrie-so3ro
    @Carrie-so3ro 2 месяца назад +6

    This was a GREAT video that you found! He SHOULD be a language teacher as he has (obviously, since not trained), a NATURAL TALENT for doing so!
    I am glad that you found this. It was super funny & super informative. Polish is one of (if not THE) hardest languages to learn, because of the sound combinations you have to just get your ear & then tongue used to in time - (I am not in a position to judge if it makes sense or not.) This video with his EXCELLENT breakdown, would make that time to learn the language so much smaller.
    I am glad that you found this channel.

  • @macabrescafresca
    @macabrescafresca 2 месяца назад +66

    It's a good video, accurate and funny. For sure it's funnier than my humble creations, although mine is a little bit more structured. If you're curious, there's stuff about how to speak Polish, how to say Polish tongue twisters, Polish slang... It's not like I'm trying to get you and others to watch my stuff, no... not at all 😂 Cough, cough.... It's called "Polish in a pill"

    • @lothariobazaroff3333
      @lothariobazaroff3333 2 месяца назад +1

      There are some inaccuracies, for instance Polish and English L may be different, depending on the English word (it's always the same in modern Polish). Polish L is a voiced alveolar lateral approximant [l], whereas English L is often a voiced velarized alveolar approximant [ɫ], so called "dark L".

    • @mojeparanoje9030
      @mojeparanoje9030 2 месяца назад +1

      @@lothariobazaroff3333 No i wreszcie wyjaśnione, dzięki 😂😂😂

  • @Ganimedes_pl
    @Ganimedes_pl 2 месяца назад +32

    That's my favourite video about Polish language.

  • @paulinarapicka
    @paulinarapicka 2 месяца назад +34

    "Wszyscy szczodrze głaszczą wstrzemięźliwe pszczoły"- it does make sense, somewhat. It could be translated to: "Everyone generously strokes the temperate (literal translation of "wstrzemięźliwe": "abstemious", it has a few meanings) bees".

    • @lordkelvin441
      @lordkelvin441 2 месяца назад +4

      Ones temperate enough not to sting you for your 'caress'...

    • @echinorlax
      @echinorlax 2 месяца назад +8

      It's like 'The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog' - technically a correct sentence, but it's usable only for specific linguistical/typographical function, not in any real world application. And word "wstrzemięźliwy" is used very rarely, especially with Poles not being great with abstention and rarely creating the necessary context :P

  • @Johnsmitty1971
    @Johnsmitty1971 Месяц назад +7

    I’m Polish. What’s your superpower?

    • @ledZion
      @ledZion Месяц назад +2

      Taka ciekawostka, Polacy Czesi i Słowacy używali języka polskiego do kodowania wiadomości podczas drugiej wojny światowej. Podobno były też takie przypadki w Wielkiej Brytanii, kiedy Brytyjczycy odkryli że Niemcy mają spory problem... Z rozumieniem polskiego 😂

  • @angelikaD
    @angelikaD 2 месяца назад +30

    I saw someone react to this video just yesterday and I like it. It sums up everything I would say. And yeah writing and reading in polish is very simple... If we forget about using the right letter to spell "rzeka/river" for example that is.
    It's not like English where you have to learn how to spell and pronounce every frickin word cause it makes no sense and like this dude said are whatever tf they want. While in polish learning the alfabet is enough, plus as a bonus there are actual spelling rules that apply to almost every word(there are just few exceptions)

    • @joannas4057
      @joannas4057 2 месяца назад

      " writing and reading in polish is very simple"....LOL, uhmmm, no it is not. Not for a foreigner.

  • @zbyszanna
    @zbyszanna 2 месяца назад +20

    If you're interested in the feedback about your pronunciation, here I go:
    - do not put Polish y between w and sz in wszyscy - its a typical error of English speaking people, they can't say many consonants one after another and they add Polish y, so instead of wszyscy they say wyszyscy. It's the same with Zbyszek for example, English speakers insert y and it becomes Zybyszek or Zabyszek. Try recording yourself and you will see what I'm talking about.
    - when pronouncing the whole word, try starting by reading each consonant and vowel in order, one at a time and only then try to speed it up until you get the whole word. We pronounce every consonant and vowel, there are no silent consonants in Polish - instead of wszyscy you say either szyscy (you skip the w), instead of szczodrze you said szodrze (you skipped cz) and that's not good
    - the hardness of sz and cz isn't there in your speech, you need to listen carefully how hard they are and say them equally hard. In most cases it doesn't matter and people will understand you, but if you want to pronounce it correctly, those are hard ass consonants.

    • @RafalTraveler
      @RafalTraveler 2 месяца назад +1

      Thanks for that feerback. I was too lazy to write it but couldn't agree more 🙂.
      PS: Mert, great job anyway! and thank you for sharing your efforts 🙂 if you think about it, after learning the sounds by heart (not letters but sounds), polish really becomes easy to read. All the best!

  • @rafaelt1960
    @rafaelt1960 Месяц назад +2

    I love the humor in this video 😂 shows exactly how much humor polish people have, but it's oftentimes not quite easy to translate

  • @MuSic-ok7dh
    @MuSic-ok7dh Месяц назад +4

    [c] is basically a shorthand for [ts]. There may be some minor difference that nobody can hear.
    [ą] (a with tail) is actually a variation of [o] sound not [a] - for historical reasons that we wont explain here.
    If you want to frighten foreigner, ask them to write "Żółć" (bile). Yes, its a four-letter word consisting of four special polish characters. I don't recall any longer polish words that render as series of squares if you don't have international font installed (if you see four squares before, check your font settings).

  • @PioteronYT
    @PioteronYT 2 месяца назад +2

    It's funny to see like other people try their best to learn my Launguage and what this specyfic word even mean. But it's nice to see the people even try to learn it. Good Video and have a nice day or night.

  • @amwkacprzak
    @amwkacprzak 2 месяца назад +6

    I'm Polish and I loved this funny video and your reactions. By the way, I'd like to tell you that this sentence is absolutely correct, although the depicted situation is less than possible. 😉It means: "Everyone generously pets the temperate bees".

  • @obserwator1766
    @obserwator1766 2 месяца назад +7

    Great video. In a very concentrated form (sometimes even too much), but it contains everything that can be said to make an English-speaking person read, or rather "pronounce" Polish well.
    It reminded me of a story.
    Once, a friend from Canada, an English teacher, told me (and showed me) that reading in Polish was easy for him, even if he didn't understand anything.
    When I expressed surprise, she said more or less the same thing that was said in this video:
    - each letter (group) always sounds the same - you read what is written. There are no "situations" like "Pacific Ocean" - 3 x "c" and 3 different pronunciations.
    - you add sounds one by one and you get a word.
    By the way. Honestly, I must mention that he was also an amateur guitarist and singer. It seems to me that the so-called "musical hearing" makes it easier to learn the pronunciation of even "strange" sounds.

  • @Wiesto1
    @Wiesto1 2 месяца назад +39

    Read this:
    Konstantynopolitańczykowianeczka kupiła za pięćdziesięciogroszówkę stół z powyłamywanymi nogami, a jej Matka Konstantynopolitańczykowianka zdenerwowała się z tego powodu.
    Good Luck!

    • @TomaszB
      @TomaszB 2 месяца назад +4

      Szkoda tylko, że Konstan... nie jest prawdziwym słowem, co sprawia, że całe zdanie jest do bani :D

    • @Wiesto1
      @Wiesto1 2 месяца назад +8

      @@TomaszB jest w połowie bo to jest mowa o Konstantynopolu którego nie ma (państwa-Miasta), albo jest używane na Mieszkankę (I)Stambułu, który po polsku Brzmi Konstantynopol, tak jak jest Królewiec, ale mówiliśmy wcześniej Kalilingrad.

    • @adamkas8396
      @adamkas8396 2 месяца назад +1

      ​@@TomaszB fakt, Konstantynopolitanczykowianeczka powstała sztucznie powstała by być taka długa, bo nie jest prawidłową formą powinno być Konstantypolitańka, lub coś w tym stylu. A samo słowo oznacza młodą mieszkankę Konstantynopola, czyli młodą mieszkankę Stambułu

    • @Xoruam
      @Xoruam 2 месяца назад

      Konstantynopolitańczykiewiczówianeczki trzy, potocznie zwane...

  • @filosgamer
    @filosgamer 2 месяца назад +11

    2:48 i just spilled my water when he said that

  • @juliastrzyga2274
    @juliastrzyga2274 Месяц назад +1

    It's literally the best vid about polish lnguage on the internet :D :D Dude who made it, made Poles more proud then Chopin ever did. 🤣

  • @GregPriceAction
    @GregPriceAction Месяц назад +1

    You're amazing to learn a language with world's second most difficult grammar. You do it great!

  • @carolinedominique4876
    @carolinedominique4876 Месяц назад +1

    Hahaha that's awesome! I love that. Thank you for sharing 👌

  • @aleksandrakaczynska3083
    @aleksandrakaczynska3083 2 месяца назад +9

    Try niedźwiedź, dżdżownica, chrząszcz, grząski, gąszcz, brzeszczot, brzęczenie... 😅 briliant video

  • @juleksz.5785
    @juleksz.5785 2 месяца назад +14

    In case of ch/h, rz/ż and u/ó , these are archaic forms wich have been used to write different sounds. Currently there are still regionalisms where theya re pronouced differently, but aside from that only grammar differs them ; they morph from different sounds, ie r-rz, g-ż etc (i don't remeber how thought)

  • @przemysawdata6246
    @przemysawdata6246 2 месяца назад +4

    There are a few cases of "zi" when "i" ain't soften "z." It is a colloquial name of Polish currency "złoty" - "ziko," name of a southern-african country "Zimbabwe," but it is caused by a fact the original name isn't a familiar Polish word, "zidentyfikować," (to identify) where it is even a little stop between "z" and "i", the same ziścić (to make - a dream - true). Thus, "zi" not it all makes a sound "ź."

  • @pokfut7346
    @pokfut7346 15 дней назад +2

    wszyscy szczodrze głaszczą wstrzemięźliwe pszczoły this sentens means everyone generously pets the temperate bees (if you want to know)

  • @kenkeneth4964
    @kenkeneth4964 2 месяца назад +3

    This guy is a champion of the world.

  • @kubaswiercz
    @kubaswiercz 4 дня назад

    great job!!! Now, the next level is: "chrząszcz trzeszczy w źdźbłach trzciny" :) (a beetle is making cracking sounds in the reeds (the plant))

  • @GaiasPlanet
    @GaiasPlanet Месяц назад

    i know polish and english, the "teacher" in the video speaks polish really well

  • @rufsven8312
    @rufsven8312 2 месяца назад +1

    There is known polish joke about English language : "You write Oxford and read it Cambrige ""
    It make sense. Another case of speling diferently letter - here letter "c" and what is more in one name(!!) : "PAcIFIc OcEAN"

  • @vodkaczystazrodlana
    @vodkaczystazrodlana 2 месяца назад +2

    3:21 as a Pole I can tell that this isn't hard if you're in Poland since you were born, for us English is dark magic though xD

  • @PanSciana
    @PanSciana 2 месяца назад +2

    I'm from Poland and I know it's difficult, but keep practicing and you'll learn to speak just like my German friend, just don't give up :)

  • @magdalenh
    @magdalenh 20 дней назад

    Great video indeed :) But we also have soft and sweet sentences like "Mali hulali po polu i pili kakao" - allegedly told to a Hawaiian girl by a famous Polish poet (highly doubtful). Anyway, this is a perfectly correct sentence in Polish, and it means "The little ones were fribbling in a field and drinking cocoa"

  • @Niu-jork
    @Niu-jork 21 день назад

    As a Polish person it's truly entartaining to watch others struggle against my language I use everyday

  • @ImaginationUser
    @ImaginationUser 2 месяца назад

    As a Pole, that's how I'd attempt explaining the sounds to an English speaker myself. Good video.

  • @Vhsbdg
    @Vhsbdg 2 месяца назад +5

    Thank You again Mordko

  • @rudakitka6929
    @rudakitka6929 2 месяца назад +2

    It is also worthy to tell that we almost every time write "rz" before these leatters : p, k, d, b , t g and j . pRZeżyć = survive, bRZuch = belly, dRZewo = tree, kRZesło = chair, tRZustka = pancreas, gRZech = sin, dojRZały = mature. But in some cases we write sz like: pSZenica = wheat, pSZczoła = bee, kSZtałt = shape. There are other cases , but i donnn't want to write them all.

    • @zaperu3700
      @zaperu3700 2 месяца назад

      Chrząszcz brzmi w trzcinie i gra na komputerze

    • @goatman86
      @goatman86 2 месяца назад

      Did you mean "after these letters"?

    • @rudakitka6929
      @rudakitka6929 2 месяца назад

      @@goatman86 Oh yes 😅

  • @arashimifune2853
    @arashimifune2853 Месяц назад

    I love how re roasts both Polish and English languages :D

  • @sandradabrowska4816
    @sandradabrowska4816 2 месяца назад +1

    The Polish language is so beautiful ❤🇵🇱❤

  • @Ashleygames1000
    @Ashleygames1000 10 дней назад

    as a polish person who lives in germany for all her live she can remember i got to learn myself some hard polish words. 😄 ill be going now!😆

  • @kjur0
    @kjur0 2 месяца назад

    As a Pole I must say... I'm sharing this video to all of my friends who don't speak Polish

  • @patrykrak8905
    @patrykrak8905 2 месяца назад

    I think the we rarely use words as szczodrze or wstrzemięźliwie. However these sounds sz, cz , rz and so on are basically the most confusing and difficult to learn. Imo. And watching this video as a polish person made me laugh a lot ;D and a the same time I’ve learned some things that I have never pay attention to. Thanks a lot

  • @kozumi5889
    @kozumi5889 2 месяца назад

    Very funny and good explanation to read. Don't worry if some of the letters sound familiar, it's something you can work on. I can tell you this because recognizing similar letters in two very similar words is part of a dyslexia test, which I had several times in my life. Like wszyscy and fszyscy or chelp and chleb.

  • @adamk.837
    @adamk.837 2 месяца назад +3

    5:04 actually marznąć is only word in polish where rz is read r z if we dont count English words like Tarzan

    • @brighthades5968
      @brighthades5968 2 месяца назад +1

      mierzić?

    • @adamk.837
      @adamk.837 2 месяца назад

      @@brighthades5968
      Yea but is not exactly r and z is r and zi which is already a digraph

    • @brighthades5968
      @brighthades5968 2 месяца назад

      @@adamk.837 yeah i guess but it's still spelled 'rz'

    • @adamk.837
      @adamk.837 2 месяца назад

      @@brighthades5968 yeah but you know zet is basically ź in this word

    • @brighthades5968
      @brighthades5968 2 месяца назад

      @@adamk.837 why are we talking in english lol

  • @PaweKabanski
    @PaweKabanski 2 месяца назад +4

    Not exactly scientific but very entertaining one :-)

  • @Normal_Frog
    @Normal_Frog 2 месяца назад +1

    Polska górą! Niech wszyscy wiedzą.

  • @katkrauze4250
    @katkrauze4250 10 дней назад

    but it actually makes sense: Everyone generously pets the temperate bees.

  • @AlbertFaustVT
    @AlbertFaustVT 2 месяца назад

    A good explanation of the polish letters - I can confirm as Polish person.
    Makes me wonder how did I remember all the English words how they are spoken XD

  • @_Borowik_i_nwm_co_dalej-_-
    @_Borowik_i_nwm_co_dalej-_- 27 дней назад +1

    Yea, that's just Polish❤🇵🇱

  • @wieslawirzyniec4527
    @wieslawirzyniec4527 Месяц назад

    for the record, in 'wstrzemięźliwe' the rz can be pronounced silently as s and the initial 'w' since it is before a silent sound as an 'f'.

  • @jerzykiler4386
    @jerzykiler4386 2 месяца назад +2

    If you like this way of teaching you should definitely watch something from ‘Dopaminowy wąż’ - Dopamine snake ;) I guess there is some movie in English on his channel.

  • @gamerek9546
    @gamerek9546 2 месяца назад +1

    Btw here's a little ad "winogrona czerwone 40% taniej 8.99 za kilogram i banany bio 4.95 za kilogram"

  • @Akira_western_riding
    @Akira_western_riding 2 месяца назад +1

    All Polish! Who know "Grzegorz Brzęczyszczykiewicz" joke?

  • @1998natan
    @1998natan Месяц назад

    Ngl i love learning languages and i think i love Polish the most, it just has the most sense lol

  • @vatazhka
    @vatazhka Месяц назад

    "OMG, these consonant clusters" - it's funny how "ch" in English is less scary than "cz" in Polish.
    BTW, Germans write this sound as "tsch"...

  • @telefon8102
    @telefon8102 2 месяца назад

    For me as a Pole it was super weird that such a word as 'queue' exists. When i first saw it i read it like it was 'qu-e-u-e' because in my language its impossible to pronounce more than 2 vowels at once.

  • @druhnej
    @druhnej 2 месяца назад

    He teach it really good. It was really nice to leasing to him.

  • @grazynawolska8160
    @grazynawolska8160 5 дней назад

    Pretty sure dżem when i was a kid was (d)(ż)(em) not (dż)em ... there was a separtion in sounds between d and ż, like he said in mar-znąć. But maybe english "jam" influenced it since.

  • @Zoe-ot5kp
    @Zoe-ot5kp 2 месяца назад +10

    Its easy .😂 Try to say this " W Szczebrzeszczynie chrząszcz brzmi w trzcinie. "Good luck 😂😂😂

    • @ParoK1
      @ParoK1 2 месяца назад +5

      Kur*a ja zawsze myślałem że to jest "Strzebrzeszyn"

    • @Zoe-ot5kp
      @Zoe-ot5kp 2 месяца назад +2

      @@ParoK1 nie przejmuj sie . Którykolwiek łamie język 😂

    • @works4me89
      @works4me89 2 месяца назад +3

      @@ParoK1 dobrze że nie Strzep-se-szyn

    • @ParoK1
      @ParoK1 2 месяца назад

      @@works4me89 strzep se synie :)

    • @arturmolenda2858
      @arturmolenda2858 2 месяца назад

      ​@@Zoe-ot5kpjak już tak bardzo chcesz kogoś wywrócić umysl do góry nogami, zrob to nie szablonowo ;)
      Konstantynopolitanczykówianeczka 😂

  • @raxtuss1212
    @raxtuss1212 2 месяца назад

    10:08 - man, you said it extremally well, like, better than i could (as native... I cant say 'r')

  • @Netsuki
    @Netsuki 2 месяца назад

    I don't know if that guy is Polish person or not, but he pronounces the words very well, so I assume it's actually Polish guy. And as a Polish person myself, as much as he is saying he is not taught to teach, he actually does it pretty well in humorous way. What is the best part is that he actually understands the stuff, instead of just saying it.
    Also I want to point out that it's not exactly true that one letter is one sound. But simplifying it, yeah. But linguistically, it's a little more complicated. Like he described with "w" sounding like "f" in "wszyscy". That's just softening it, but there are cases where you actually pronounce the letter differently and "ą" is best example of this and we even learn this in the elementary school, like it's "on", "om", "oł" etc, depending on the word. But let's finish it here.

  • @wiktoriakazmierczak6072
    @wiktoriakazmierczak6072 19 дней назад +1

    I AM FROM POLAND

  • @MateuszDobrowolny
    @MateuszDobrowolny 2 месяца назад

    zi - zignorować (to ignore (once)). 'z' is then a prefix for verb, and makes the continouos verb - a perfective verb.

  • @jacekkozowski4304
    @jacekkozowski4304 2 месяца назад +1

    A lot of "WSZYSCY"
    ruclips.net/video/LAL8wFwuN0g/видео.html
    Przystanek Woodstock 2015
    Song "Na szczycie" by Grubson - LIVE

  • @skvlsky
    @skvlsky 2 месяца назад

    9:08 actually I never heard a difference myself. But now when I speak these words in slow montion I can hear different tone of that H

  • @delfinal7560
    @delfinal7560 2 месяца назад

    As a Polish person I approve of this video

  • @lordkelvin441
    @lordkelvin441 2 месяца назад +1

    3:16 Reminds me my maths teacher in 4th grade...

  • @arkadiuszkrasicki5478
    @arkadiuszkrasicki5478 2 месяца назад +4

    #Suggestions_for_the_next_film;
    *A Polish documentary about the Greater Poland Uprising with English subtitles, it lasts almost an hour but everything is thoroughly explained and since you have already made such films, I hope this one will also be commented on;*
    ruclips.net/video/z6-poUU6Rac/видео.htmlsi=CPcwKfHsP-K3dCzy

  • @anzelmasmatutis2500
    @anzelmasmatutis2500 2 месяца назад +2

    Yes, Polish love their "Z" to put in every word :D

  • @Johnsmitty1971
    @Johnsmitty1971 Месяц назад

    Baj far yt mast bi de best polisz leson ołt dere.
    By far it must be the best polish lesson out there. 😁😎

  • @KatmonoRBLX14
    @KatmonoRBLX14 2 месяца назад

    Now draw him speaking fluent Polish.

  • @brAdmeN
    @brAdmeN Месяц назад

    Chrząszcz brzmi w trzcinie w Szczebrzeszynie, a Szczebrzeszyn z tego słynie
    Polish so easy

  • @Agata-si3jl
    @Agata-si3jl Месяц назад +1

    Runy słowiańskie, dobrze fonetycznie pokazują polski alfabet.Krzształt runy to pokazanie ułożonego jezyka w jamie ustnej.Powoduje to takie samo brzmienie ,zgodne z określoną literą.

  • @Oliwia_2147
    @Oliwia_2147 24 дня назад

    im too from poland u can try learn this launguage but grammar is super super hard good luck :)

  • @tedkrasicki3857
    @tedkrasicki3857 2 месяца назад

    Wojciehowicz: it's spelled just like it sounds!

  • @gamerek9546
    @gamerek9546 2 месяца назад +1

    Witam pana dopiero co napotkałem ten film ale podoba mi się trzymaj się ziomuś

  • @ewelinanajgebauer8862
    @ewelinanajgebauer8862 2 месяца назад

    Polish entails pronouncing a lot of things soft, hard, or both.
    Wszyscy is best pronounced "ff-sh-yh-ss-sh-c-yh", for example.

  • @Thornxwolf
    @Thornxwolf 2 месяца назад

    Welcom in Poland ♥️🇵🇱

  • @IzumiMandanado
    @IzumiMandanado 2 месяца назад

    I really like this video and I agree with everything said over there. Except maybe for Poles eating vowels :P we don't eat them like Arabs do, but we just pronounce them differently, sometimes hiding them well :)

  • @taco-xq3ub
    @taco-xq3ub 22 дня назад

    read: chrząszcz brzmi w trzcinie or stół z powyłamywanymi nogami

  • @Jakub-j7m
    @Jakub-j7m 2 месяца назад

    ok so world "wstrzemiężliwe" is rarely used cuz like i heard it once from my polish teacher

    • @rzmijka
      @rzmijka 2 месяца назад

      It depends if you read books

  • @wiktorbronowski6203
    @wiktorbronowski6203 2 месяца назад

    Ludzie potrafiący wypowiedzieć wyraz ✨️konstantynopolitańczykowianeczka✨️
    👇

  • @expedit54
    @expedit54 2 месяца назад

    Zażółć gęślą jaźń 😂

  • @juilescieg
    @juilescieg 2 месяца назад

    I am polish, (living in germany) and I have no clue what szczodrze and wstrzemiezliwe means.
    For foregners most important words are not so complicated: dzięnkuje ~ thank you. dzien dobry ~ good day. And pszepraszam ~ excuse me.

    • @ledZion
      @ledZion Месяц назад

      It's "dziękuję", without 'n' after first 'ę'. And its "dzień". A small correction for you, mate 🙃

  • @emoth.mothie
    @emoth.mothie Месяц назад

    ✨ INSTANT FEET DEFEAT ✨

  • @szczecinskimany
    @szczecinskimany 2 месяца назад

    very good teacher

  • @elealion1469
    @elealion1469 2 месяца назад

    I hear "Instant Feet Defeat"
    Image in my head: KOed by smelly feet

  • @Luna._.YT.0001
    @Luna._.YT.0001 2 месяца назад

    The thumbnail means taller

  • @delfinal7560
    @delfinal7560 2 месяца назад

    Best content ever

  • @KataGala
    @KataGala 2 месяца назад +1

    l'd like to argue with statement, that Ą and Ę sound the same all the time or people don't care how they speak. It's not true. Because these sounds sound different, depend on where they stay in a word. This is Polish phonetics 😉
    Also for exp. ś, ź, ć, dź and si, zi, ci, dzi are not the same, but I'll finish here, because noone needs to make it more complicated than it is now, after the video, which was funny and definitly useful 😊

  • @zuzannazagorski9205
    @zuzannazagorski9205 2 месяца назад

    Man, I live in Poland. It’s a pretty hard language and I understand why people struggle with it example: Dwa dwie dwoje and I know kurwa

  • @2xzn2xzn
    @2xzn2xzn 2 месяца назад

    WHERE ARE MY POLISH PEOPLE
    Polski:GDZIE SĄ WSZYSZCY POLACY MOJI

  • @filipsobczynski3718
    @filipsobczynski3718 Месяц назад

    8:09 this word is very uncommon