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Polish school for non-Polish speakers

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Ben

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Post 05 Jul 2013, 03:02

Re: Polish school for non-Polish speakers

Sado explained that it is indeed related to gender. My mind always goes back to Spanish, where it works quite differently.

This Polish is freakin hard stuff.
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T*AnTi-V!RuZz

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Post 05 Jul 2013, 09:31

Re: Polish school for non-Polish speakers

Hi,

A colleague of mine is Polish, and she says "kolego" is wrong and should be "kolega".
I have no idea who's right, so please enlighten me (and her :P) :D

(Or is that male/female stuff, too? :P)
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dicsoupcan

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Post 05 Jul 2013, 09:46

Re: Polish school for non-Polish speakers

as far as i heard sado speak about that on teamspeak it is male/female stuff, yes he is lecturing on teamspeak :D
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sado1

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Post 05 Jul 2013, 11:40

Re: Polish school for non-Polish speakers

You say "kolego" when directly speaking to someone (that's Vocative case, in Polish "wołacz"). But the default form of the word is indeed "kolega". And yes, Litude's guess was right, although I already told Ben what's the difference on TS.
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Ben

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Post 05 Jul 2013, 12:42

Re: Polish school for non-Polish speakers

The feminine form of kolega is koleżanka or something like that.
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Omigoshe

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Post 06 Jul 2013, 12:16

Re: Polish school for non-Polish speakers

Hello, what does "Kurwa" mean?

I was in a game with quite some Polish guys and they were mad at a guy lagging, I guess it's a bad word? Often they said KURWA in capital
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Ben

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Post 06 Jul 2013, 21:40

Re: Polish school for non-Polish speakers

Hehe, Kurwa is one of the first Polish words people learn ;)

Yes it is a foul word. Its meaning is pretty close to "B***h."
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sado1

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Post 07 Jul 2013, 11:09

Re: Polish school for non-Polish speakers

Yes it is a foul word. Its meaning is pretty close to "B***h."
That's correct. Although this word has many foul meanings, usually it's serving a similar function to English "f**k" (for example, when you're pissed and you got nothing better to say, kurwa is the best word to use); Polish people often use kurwa as a punctuation mark ("So I was, kurwa, in the shop, kurwa, and you know, kurwa, I bought there, kurwa, some strawberries, kurwa." - a typical Polish sentence example). Also, it's used to show astonishment ("o kurwa!" - oh, sh**). As Ben points out, this word may simply mean a prostitute as well.
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pawel95

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Post 07 Jul 2013, 11:49

Re: Polish school for non-Polish speakers

Yeah like sado already said Kurwa is like an AddOn to the Polish language, here a nice helping for the students here, that sado hasn´t to teach you that long XD :

Image


And here is a typical polish mouse:
https://fbcdn-sphotos-f-a.akamaihd.net/ ... 6075_n.jpg
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Shadaoe

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Post 07 Jul 2013, 12:50

Re: Polish school for non-Polish speakers

It means so many things :o
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Ben

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Post 09 Jul 2013, 02:55

Re: Polish school for non-Polish speakers

Okay, so I have a question. In Polish, on means he and ona means she, right? That's simple enough, but both oni and one seem to have the same meaning: they. How do I know the when to use the respective pronoun?
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sado1

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Post 09 Jul 2013, 07:40

Re: Polish school for non-Polish speakers

oni means masculine they, one means feminine/neuter they. If you're talking about a group of people of both genders, you use the masculine form (oni).
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Ben

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Post 09 Jul 2013, 13:36

Re: Polish school for non-Polish speakers

Yay! 500 posts! :P

Thanks sado. Now I just need to figure out how to pronounce them, respectively :)
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pawel95

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Post 09 Jul 2013, 13:42

Re: Polish school for non-Polish speakers

Thanks sado. Now I just need to figure out how to pronounce them, respectively :)
Use the googletranslator as pronounciation help not please :D
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Ben

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Post 09 Jul 2013, 16:11

Re: Polish school for non-Polish speakers

Rosetta Stone has a nice pronunciation guide. that's what I've been using. But to me, the difference between oni and one is so small, I can't really distinguish them.
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