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Posts by benszymanski  

Joined: 29 Feb 2008 / Male ♂
Last Post: 24 Mar 2010
Threads: Total: 8 / In This Archive: 7
Posts: Total: 465 / In This Archive: 392
From: małopolskie
Speaks Polish?: Yes
Interests: weight training, internet

Displayed posts: 399 / page 3 of 14
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benszymanski   
27 May 2009
Language / The Dative Case [62]

indirect object

Yes you are right but I think you mean "direct object" not "indirect object":

direct object - accusative
indirect object - usually dative.
benszymanski   
25 May 2009
Life / Can a non-EU student studying in Poland apply for the EHIC card? [5]

[quote]But I need to travel around Europe
Even if you did pay ZUS contributions and were entitled to the EHIC card (or in Polish EKUZ) I wouldn't bother getting it because the process is a joke:

britishinpoland.com/blog/2008/12/european-health-insurance-cards-ehic/
benszymanski   
25 May 2009
UK, Ireland / Buying a used car from a private seller in UK. What is the law if... [18]

It's probably a very long and drawn out process.

Actually it's not. My Mum's taken people to the Small Claims Court twice and won, it's quite straight forward and not expensive.

But as terri has said they have no legal case anyway so this wouldn't help unfortunately....
benszymanski   
24 May 2009
Life / Applying for EU passport... [51]

how long more or less it takes

About one year plus or minus 6 months. I have heard it can take up to 2 years.

I have already been waiting one year, and every 3 months I get a letter which reads along the lines of 'due to the complicated nature of the matter it's taking longer than expected'.

But you can always ask whoever is in charge of your application what the status is.
benszymanski   
18 May 2009
Language / Polish Language Pronunciation - Example Words and Phrases [178]

.which is because English, unlike Polish, has neither rhyme nor reason

yes but my point is not that English words are difficult, more that it is hard to know when using words of English origin in Polish whether they have been polonised or not, and if so, to what degree....
benszymanski   
18 May 2009
Language / Polish Language Pronunciation - Example Words and Phrases [178]

I find English words in Polish a real pain - I never know if I should pronounce it as if I was talking in English, pronounce it in English but with a Polish accent so the listener understands me, or try and pronounce it according to Polish spelling/pronunciation rules....

The other day I was talking to a Polish guy about installing an automatic gate and he pulled out a brochure for a company called "Nice". First thing I thought - is that pronounced according to English, French, Polish, something else? I pronounced it Polish style and of course got it wrong...
benszymanski   
14 May 2009
Language / difference among jechać, pojechać, and jeździć? [14]

To give you a very short explanation of perfective and imperfective:

imperfective - (e.g. wracać)

can be used for past, present and future tenses: wracałem, wracam, będę wracał

emphasis is on the action itself which normally occurs for a duration of time.
In the past tense you can think of it as "I was returning" i.e. an action in progress.

perfective - (e.g. wrócić)

can only be used for past and future. There is no present tense: wróciłem, wrócę

emphasis is on the result of the action, i.e. something you did. In the past tense you can think of it as "I returned" i.e. a completed action.

do a search on this forum for perfective/imperfective because this question is very regularly asked.
benszymanski   
13 May 2009
Language / difference among jechać, pojechać, and jeździć? [14]

Yes RJ_cdn has got it right. Just to expand on that:

Jeżdżę - indeterminate imperfective travel - e.g. in general
Jadę - determinate imperfective travel - e.g. right now
Jechałem - determinate imperfective past tense - I travelled/I was travelling
Pojadę - perfective future - I will travel
pojechałem - perfective past - I travelled
benszymanski   
13 May 2009
News / LOT (Polish Airlines) headed for a crash? [8]

I am sure the Polish government would prop them up just like the Italian government propped up air italia recently if anything happened....
benszymanski   
13 May 2009
Law / Do non-eu residents residing in Poland require Polish driving license? [20]

who have driving lic from non-EU countries

Well in the UK you can drive for one year before you have to take a British test:

direct.gov.uk/en/Motoring/DriverLicensing/DrivingInGbOnAForeignLicence/DG_4022561

I have no idea about Poland, I would imagine it to be something similar though.
benszymanski   
11 May 2009
Language / Collective numbers - dwoje, troje, czworo [38]

So can anyone add to my list?

I have seen it used when emphasizing a collection of something

- e.g. czworo studentów

as opposed to czterech studentów. But 95% of the time when I come across these collective numbers it's when counting children.
benszymanski   
11 May 2009
Law / Costs for importing a car from Germany to Poland. [34]

Yes except for a bike it's a bit easier and a lot cheaper. I imported my bike in February 2008 and here is exactly how I did it including time taken and costs: britishinpoland.com/blog/2008/02/importing-a-motorbike/
benszymanski   
9 May 2009
Law / Insuring a UK Citizen on a Polish registered car... [18]

whether Polish insurance on the vehicle would cover it in the UK

Yes it would - insurance in one EU country automatically gives you the minimum legal cover in all other EU countries: ec.europa.eu/youreurope/nav/en/citizens/travelling/your-car/insurance/index_en.html#5405_1
benszymanski   
9 May 2009
Law / Do non-eu residents residing in Poland require Polish driving license? [20]

Cardno85

yes - that is exactly my understanding. In fact I just found the section on the europa.eu website at ec.europa.eu/youreurope/nav/en/citizens/travelling/your-car/driving-license/index_en.html#286

If holders of driving licences changed residence or place of work from one Member State to another they used to have to exchange their licence within one year (Directive 80/1263/EEC). This obligation was abolished on 1 July 1996 and exchanging of driving licences has been voluntary since then.

benszymanski   
8 May 2009
Law / Do non-eu residents residing in Poland require Polish driving license? [20]

As far as I know you are only supposed to drive on your foreign license for a year, then get a Polish one.

I read up on this on the europa.eu website and I understood that there is no requirement (be it time or otherwise) to change your licence at all within EU member states. As long as your licence is still valid there is no problem.

I am sure the situation is different for our non-EU friends though but I have no idea of the requirements.
benszymanski   
8 May 2009
Language / Question on diminutives (Stefan and Ewa) [6]

Not likely

You are probably right, but I have an aquaintance called Ewa and have heard how her husband calls her. It seems that a lot of these diminutives can be 'made up'.
benszymanski   
8 May 2009
Language / Question on diminutives (Stefan and Ewa) [6]

Ewka, Eweczka, Ewalunia...

Stefan I am not sure but would guess/expect:

Stefanek, Stefanuś.

Don't know if 'Stefek' or 'Stefuś' exist?
benszymanski   
7 May 2009
Life / Moving away from Poland, can I claim retirement payments back? [6]

Does anybody know if there is some provision for this

If the countries you worked in and the country you will retire in are all in the EU then there are provisions for this, but you don't mention what country you are from/going to.
benszymanski   
29 Apr 2009
USA, Canada / Dual Citizenship: American and Polish? [53]

My grandfather was 100% Polish and was born in New York which means his parents immigrated to the US

I am going to guess that your great grandparents left Poland before 1918 in which case no, you can't claim citizenship through them.

Citizenship can generally be claimed only by descendants of Polish citizens who left Poland after the country became an independent state in 1918

You can read up on wikipedia: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish_nationality_law#Citizenship_by_descent
benszymanski   
28 Apr 2009
Law / Paying Tax For The Self-Employed In Poland (Yet more Questions...) [16]

Look at the UK amounts - 2.40 a week, plus 8% over 5,715 a yea

If you are running a Ltd company in the UK like I was, I was paying roughly 10% for employee's NI and 10% for employer's NI. Basically 20%.

Yes you are right in that if you suddenly lost your income you are still paying a lot.

Regarding these benefits anyway - I value them as worthless. I certainly won't be relying on the state to pay my pension or give me disability benefit because it's a pittance.

And when your two year discount period is up you could always close your company and open it up in someone else's name. I understand that after 5 years you can re-open your Polish company and get another 2 year discount period.
benszymanski   
27 Apr 2009
Law / Paying Tax For The Self-Employed In Poland (Yet more Questions...) [16]

Not sure I follow your argument. ZUS costs 800 a month, so factor that in to your business plan. Then be happy that you have a discount for the first 2 years. Personally I don't see why ZUS should be based on income as it is in the UK because it is an insurance payment that costs the same for everybody (if you presume that everyone has the same chance of getting ill).
benszymanski   
20 Apr 2009
Law / It is impossible to get temporary residency in Poland [23]

Maybe this means the E111?

The E111 was replaced by the European Health Insurance Card (EHIC or EKUZ in Polish) a few years ago.

What they are after is proof that he is self-sufficient for his application for a karta pobytu. Which documents are required depends on which status he puts on his application - for example you could say you are a student in which case you need to show that you are studying somewhere. Or you could say that you have a Polish spouse in which case you need to show your marriage certificate. Or you could say you are working here in which case you need... blah blah blah...

Regarding the bank account again this depends. I just provided a photocopy of my UK credit card and they were happy.

You need to talk to the office for foreigners' affairs in the district where you are living. For malopolskie this is in Krakow at ulica Przy Rondzie.
benszymanski   
20 Apr 2009
Law / It is impossible to get temporary residency in Poland [23]

welcome to Poland - unforunately there's a bit of bureacracy to contend with. After that though life here is great.

do a google for "zameldowanie" or "british in poland" or check out britishinpoland.com
benszymanski   
16 Apr 2009
Life / ahhhh the lovely Urzad Miasta [7]

I had similar problems in that I couldn't renew until the old one expired, so I just asked to cancel my existing one and then did a new one which solved the problem.

Whether the building owner is required in person or not does seem to be dictated by the wind direction as Seanus suggests... :-) I needed the building owner the first time, but not on subsequent occasions (which surprised me).