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Posts by Switezianka  

Joined: 17 Jun 2008 / Female ♀
Last Post: 29 May 2009
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Posts: Total: 463 / In This Archive: 403

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Switezianka   
6 Sep 2008
News / Poland boycotts German goods? [266]

Aren't most Polish words for tools actually German?

There are many German words for tools in Poland. Also, most sailing term are German. But I don't know how they came to Polish.

The Russian Language is much older and that partly explains why Russian is much harder than Polish and is less phonetic too. The Czech Language is probably more useful as it is nearer to Russian and you can easily learn Croatian, which is similar. Polish, which copies German patterns of speech is different and further away that other Slavonic languages. The Poles hate the Russians except for when their country is occupied and then it is the same old storey, 'please come and save us but do not stay a moment longer than is necessary'.

I haven't read such BS for a long time, even on the net.
Switezianka   
6 Sep 2008
Food / Favorite Pierogi? [56]

I like ruskie with sour cream and melted butter with fried onions. The onions must be cut into little pieces and fried on the butter. You pour this on your pierogi and then, add the cream. I can have thirty at once, too. But they must be home made.

And I like sauerkraut and forest mushroom pierogi with lard and skwarki. Sauerkraut for the filling must be fried on lard, of course. But I eat in only for Christmas Eve, because it takes a lot of time to make them.
Switezianka   
29 Aug 2008
News / Blood libel fresco in Polish cathedral? [35]

The problem with blood libel is not that Jews are accused of killing someone. Jews have murdered a lot of people, and there are some psychopaths among Jews like among any other nationality.

What is crap about it is that the blood libel connects the crimes with Judaism and states that this is a ritual and that the blood is needed for matzah. And since the Torah is the basis of all the branches of Judaism, and it clearly says: 'You can't eat blood', the blood libel is just bulls.hit.

Jews have lived in isolated communities, so all the evil that any Jew committed was not ascribed to an individual but to Judaism. Nobody says that raping and killing a woman is a Christian ritual just because there are some people in Christian communities who have committed that. That would be absurd, because Christianity forbids to kill and rape. And so is the blood libel absurd, because Judaism forbids to kill innocent people and to consume blood.

Every religion and community out there has some sort of devil worshiping cult or just a cult and Judaism is no different in that aspect to any other group of people out there.

You cannot equate community to religion!!!
Neither Christianity, Judaism, Islam or Buddhism has a devil-worshipping cult. If you worship devil, than you aren't a Christian, follower of Judaism, Muslim or Buddhist. You're a devil worshipper.

So, let's suppose that there is a Jewish community and within this community some Jews have decided to worship devil. For the sake of the devil they want to transgress Halacha, blaspheme a bit, so they decide to kill someone and add the non-kosher blood to the ritual Pesach matzah. That's probable. But in this case, they do not longer observe Judaism, so their crime cannot be associated with it.

It's like saying that drawing a pentacle with a goat's blood on the floor is a Christian ritual because some kids within some Christian community decided to worship Satan and did it.
Switezianka   
29 Aug 2008
Language / I know "się" is the only reflexive personal pronoun..but "jak się masz?" [34]

'One/oneself' are used as generic terms in dictionaries. If you take an English idiom dictionary, you can find an entry for: 'to be on one's wit's end', and it's assumed that the reader knows it also refers to: he's on his wit's end', 'I'm on my wit's end' etc.

Ergo, 'się' refers also to 'myself', 'yourself', 'themselves' etc.

I think your problem is that you don't know how to use a dictionary.
Switezianka   
28 Aug 2008
Language / I need a good dictionary! (book) [21]

Damn it, I didn't manage to get to the centre during the day, when the bookshops are still open. Sorry. But as soon as I get there, I'll have a look.
Switezianka   
28 Aug 2008
Life / Dogs in Poland - why do we keep them? [28]

Could you please tell me if you have animal rescue like the RSPCA in England

I wish we had...

This law is poorly reinforced and until the situation changes we are bound to put up with dirty streets, parks, and squares.

Each time some kids see me cleaning after my dog, they laugh at me or insult me. There are little trash bins in my neighbourhood, so each time I walk my dog, I end up carrying the poo in a bag for long distance. It's not just weak reinforcement of the law.
Switezianka   
27 Aug 2008
Travel / Cancel PKP ticket possible with refund? [3]

Yes, it is. And I think you need to have your bill with you.

But you will get some 90% of the ticket value back. If you paid extra for reservations, you will not get back the reservations payment back.
Switezianka   
27 Aug 2008
Life / People with Down Syndrome/Mental disability in Poland [26]

There is no good system of introducing mentally disabled people into normal lives. They just stay at home locked up. And many people think they should, instead of trying to live within the community.

I remember how (positively) shocked I was, when I was served by a mentally disabled boy in a youth hostel canteen in Germany. In Poland, nobody would just think of it - such boy would stay at home and never earn a grosz. I know that employers who hire disabled people get some support from the state but for some reason they don't do it.

Also, ill people don't receive therapy which helps them to live within a community.I know one guy with Aspergers who's left on his own just because he's intelligent. He desperately needs some professional therapist to teach him basic social skills, but he doesn't receive any therapy. I don't think anyone would want to hire him after he graduates because of his behaviour (he's the most annoying person I've ever met and I'd never hire him), so I guess he will stay at home with his parents and get odd jobs from time to time. If someone took care of him, he could lead a normal life because Aspergers is not even a mental disability. The whole system sucks.
Switezianka   
27 Aug 2008
News / Blood libel fresco in Polish cathedral? [35]

where can I get original matzah with blood of innocent christian baby in PL? I've already asked in Tesco and Real but they've got only the fake one, unkosher and without blood. Thx in advance

You can't buy it. You must get some floor and water, and cut some Christian baby's throat and make it yourself. But don't worry, you've still got a lot of time to learn to do it properly before the Passover.

But this guy is not worth answering.

I was answering mainly for the sake of other people who may read this thread. Reasonable people know that blood libel is a load of sh*t, but not everyone knows why it is so absurd.

I'm generally very anti-religious but I really get p*ssed off when someone talks such crap. If someone wants to criticize reasonably something Jewish, they get at Israeli politics, gender inequality in Orthodox communities, some nationalistic attitudes etc. But to talk such crap one must be an idiot.

Anyway, thanks to JoeP now I know why this matzah I got from Jews tasted much better than the one from the shop :P. I just thought it was because it was home made.
Switezianka   
25 Aug 2008
Language / Adjective and adverb comparison [19]

It is a adverb in superlative.

The basic form of the adverb is "wysoko" and the adjective is "wysoki/wysoka/wysokie", which means 'high'.

But "najwyżej" or the phrase "co najwyżej" can also mean: only, at (the) most.
Switezianka   
23 Aug 2008
News / Blood libel fresco in Polish cathedral? [35]

From Purim celebrations, you can only learn how drunk Jews look in fancy dress, lol.

.I would also suggest that crimes of similiar nature have been committed by members of the Catholic faith, and the Anglican also, including pedophile acts and more...

But nobody claims that these were religious rituals. A paedophile minister doesn't rape little boys in order to praise the Lord, does he? So, if a Jew murders someone, it's not because the need blood to make their matzah non-kosher. It's because he's a murderer and it has nothing to do with religion.

Why hasn't anyone ever accused Jews for stealing pigs for Sabbath dinner?
Switezianka   
23 Aug 2008
News / Blood libel fresco in Polish cathedral? [35]

Oh, Eloheinu, I'm so Lucky!

I went for a beer with two guys from Chabad Lubavitch (yes - the Chassidic sect funded by the Shneerson family) some two weeks ago and they didn't drain my blood! I didn't know my life was at risk!

Next time I see them, I'll kick their asses, yeah!

.they were, in addition to being Kabbalists, 'shechats' or kosher butchers....

The boy after being gaged, was wounded with a perforating instrument in the nape of the neck, temples and neck, which wounds severed the cerebral vein, the left temporal and jugular arteries, producing thus profuse hemorrhage; and afterwards, when Joutchinski (the boy's name) had lost about five glasses of blood, his body was pierced with the same instrument, lacerating thus the lungs, the liver, the right kidney and the heart, where the last wounds were inflicted, in all 47 wounds, causing acute suffering to the victim and the loss of practically all the blood of the body, and finally death."

If you killed a cow this way, it wouldn't be kosher. You really don't need a shochet (btw, that's how a Jewish butcher is called) to do this. A shochet cuts the esophagus and the trachea, not the veins.

If you had the faintest idea about Judaism, you wouldn't believe such bullsh*t.
If you could use your brain, you wouldn't either. The fact that someone was killed in the area belonging to a Jew doesn't not imply that he was killed by the Jews so they could do something that is prohibited by their religion.

Imagine a dead girl was found in your house. Following your logic, I am sure you killed her so that you coul f*ck her corpse. Logic?
Switezianka   
23 Aug 2008
News / Blood libel fresco in Polish cathedral? [35]

right, blood is not kosher but if you pray over it it just may become so. lol

Yeah, if you pray so long that God turns it into water...

Right, to end up this sh*t:

And wherever you live, you must not eat the blood of any bird or animal. If anyone eats blood, that person must be cut off from his people.

Leviticus 7:26-27
Switezianka   
23 Aug 2008
Travel / Wot? No beer allowed on Polish PKP? [30]

Once, the driver told me off while I was playing the guitar with my amp and speakers on a bus. He said I would discharge the battery.
Switezianka   
22 Aug 2008
Travel / Wot? No beer allowed on Polish PKP? [30]

WTF?
I've drunk beer on a train a few times, an saw a guy selling beer on train a thousand times. The conductor never minded...

Dougpol, they must have been making fun of you...
Switezianka   
22 Aug 2008
Language / I need a good dictionary! (book) [21]

Unfortunately, my only experience in language teaching is in teaching English, so I don't know Polish textbooks. But on Monday I think, I'll be passing by some language book stores, so I may step in and take a look at Polish-for-foreigners books. I must look inside to know what to think. I'd also recommend you getting a teacher - someone with foreign language teaching methodology training. It shouldn't be hard to find one in Poland or UK.
Switezianka   
21 Aug 2008
Language / Numbers in Polish - two different ways? [44]

This was written in 1934, and, as a guess, this manner of representing numbers may have been more common then.

You're right. It's an old-fashioned way of representing inflected numerals. Nowadays it's considered a mistake.

If it's so old, 7-em might mean 'siódmem', which is an archaic form of 'siódmym' = 7th (masculine, singular, instrumental).
Switezianka   
21 Aug 2008
Language / Polish verbs (in English) [9]

yes so what would

wy nazywacie mean then

we named ........

wy nazywacie = you (plural) name/call

we named = (my) nazwaliśmy/nazwałyśmy

i dont want jak ma na imie

NAZYWAC

So I gave you the whole present tense inflection. What's you problem?
Switezianka   
21 Aug 2008
News / Blood libel fresco in Polish cathedral? [35]

This practice did, in fact, take place on numerous occasions, primarily around Purim or Passover, to make a mockery of Christ's crucifixtion...

What? Adding blood to matzah?

it still goes on, but is not an exclusively Jewish practice by any means;

It's not a Jewish practise at all. Blood is not kosher, dude. Read some Torah. Or at least some wikipedia.
Switezianka   
21 Aug 2008
Language / Polish verbs (in English) [9]

ja nazywam
ty nazywasz
ona/ona/ono nazywa
my nazywamy
wy nazywacie
oni/one nazywają
Switezianka   
21 Aug 2008
Language / I need a good dictionary! (book) [21]

I wouldn't recommend a basic dictionary, even for a beginner. It can be very confusing. You might not get all the meaning of certain words and therefore misunderstand something, you may misuse a word because you are not given enough context in the dictionary etc..

I often see elementary level students having problems because their dictionary is too basic. E.g. when I give them a short text to write as a homework (stuff like: describe what the person in the picture is wearing), they have problems with finding any new word if they don't have a proper dictionary. Most of the attempts to find new words end in a failure because basic dictionaries give them only the translation of a word, without examples of usage, collocations, context etc.

A dictionary cannot be used as an equivalent of a textbook. They are not designed to learn from them, they're just for looking up the vocabulary and there's a lot of other important things in language learning apart from vocabulary, especially for a beginner. So, if you learn basic Polish, it doesn't mean it will be easier with a basic dictionary. On the contrary: it will be harder. You need a basic textbook and a good dictionary. And a good one has:

-examples of usage of the word
-collocations
-popular fixed phrases connected with the word and basic idioms
in most entries.
The more basic the word is, the more difficult it is to use. The entries for the basic vocabulary are usually the longest ones.

But, of course, for basic learning a two volume giant is not necessary. I think Collins is enough. The most important thing is how the entries look like.

A good-looking entry;-) (Oxford-PWN)

chair [IPA pronunciation]
I. n
1. (seat) krzesło n; (also armchair) fotel m; the dentist's chair fotel dentystyczny; to take a chair zająć miejsce, usiąść; over or on the back of a chair na oparciu krzesła

2. (chairperson) przewodnicząc|y m, -a f; to take the chair objąć przewodniczenie; to be in the chair przewodniczyć; to address one's remarks to or through the chair skierować uwagi do przewodniczącego or prowadzącego; Chair! Chair! proszę o spokój!

3. Univ (professorship) katedra f; to hold the chair of physics kierować katedrą fizyki
4. US (also electric chair) krzesło n elektryczne; to go to the chair pójść na krzesło elektryczne
II vt
1. przewodniczyć (czemuś), po|prowadzić [meeting]
2. GB n|ieść, -osić na ramionach [/i][hero]

A bad-looking entry:
portalwiedzy.onet.pl/tlumacz.html?qs=chair&tr=ang-auto

Imagine you want to write: "There's a chair next to my desk"
Switezianka   
21 Aug 2008
Language / "Droga" or "Drogi" before a name [6]

changing your name is incorrect, when you put "Droga" before a name.

WTF?

When you address someone, you say "Droga Estero". When dear Esther is the subject of the sentence, it's "Droga Estera". It's not the matter of whether there is 'droga' before it or not. This is the matter of grammatical case. When you address someone, you use vocative case (Estero, Maćku, Krystyno etc.), and when you talk about something, you use other cases. Vocative case is a bit misleading because adjectives look the same in vocative and nominative case.

If you had 'drogiej', 'drogą', then it couldn't be 'Estero' or 'Estera', but other endings.

It goes like that:

droga Estera (nominative)
drogiej Estery (genitive)
drogiej Esterze (dative)
drogą Esterę (accusative)
drogą Esterą (instrumental)
drogiej Esterze (locative)
droga Estero (vocative)

But "Droga Estero" is absolutely grammatical as long as it's in the right context.
Switezianka   
21 Aug 2008
Language / Numbers in Polish - two different ways? [44]

2-giej

drugiej - 2nd (feminine, singular, dative)

2-ma

dwiema, dwoma - two (instrumental)

4-ch

czterech - 4 (masculine, accusative)

7-em

no idea

12-tej

dwunastej - 12th (feminine, singular, locative)

17-tym

siedemnastym - 17th (masculine, instrumental)

These are simply numerals with grammatical suffixes. In fact they shouldn't be spelled tat way, the official version is that you should just write a number and a dot but sometimes people still spell it that way.

(Yeah, we inflect numerals by case, gender and, for ordinals, even number)