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Posts by osiol  

Joined: 25 Jul 2007 / Male ♂
Last Post: 26 Nov 2009
Threads: Total: 55 / In This Archive: 49
Posts: Total: 3,921 / In This Archive: 3,065

Interests: Not being on this website when I'm asleep

Displayed posts: 3114 / page 2 of 104
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osiol   
31 Oct 2009
UK, Ireland / To Brits only trout are not coarse? [18]

bass

I believe that there are a few American species of freshwater bass, whereas around Europe we're only familiar with what we call Sea Bass which is a seafish whose range extends only as far as estuaries rather than actual fresh water. I've tried Patagonian Toothfish, which is a South American sea bass which is not much better than a local sea bass other than having a cooler sounding name.
osiol   
31 Oct 2009
UK, Ireland / To Brits only trout are not coarse? [18]

It looks, from the title of this thread, that P3 is trying to say that trout should be considered to be a coarse fish.
Do trout have bad manners? If so then they are coarse.
osiol   
31 Oct 2009
UK, Ireland / To Brits only trout are not coarse? [18]

Indeed, of the fish that exclusively dwell in freshwater habitats, I think it is only trout that is not considered to be a coarse fish. Don't ask me why, but it is said that these other species just don't taste very good. Do carp not require a cleaning process whereby they are kept alive for some time in clean fresh water? I know that farmed snails similarly require a clean run of bran or similar through their digestive tracts before they can be put to culinary use.

But what about the grayling, the lady of the stream?
osiol   
26 Oct 2009
Genealogy / Poles have more Germanic Genomes than Germans! [18]

Curiously, I saw somewhere a couple of texts of an old Slavic language called Polabian. It was clearly Slavic, although it contained many more vowels than the modern Slavic languages and the word for father was Wader. Historians amongst us will probably know slightly better than I where these people lived, but I believe it to be somewhere in the area around eastern Germany / western Poland. It seems that if certain other languages had survived through history, then the case for the mixing of certain populations may have been a little clearer in some places.

On the subject of genomes, I believe these are rather more popular in Germany than they are over here. On one of my journeys leaving Poland, I vaguely remember seeing a roadside stall selling genomes and other garden ornaments close to the German border.
osiol   
25 Oct 2009
Love / Polish Gay Life [142]

Get some Zoroastrians to join in and then gayness might be cured forever.
osiol   
25 Oct 2009
Food / Is there any other Polish seafood exept herring and carp? [30]

so osiol, are you trying to say that carp is not a seafood?

Do European species of carp live in the sea? No.
Do any carp live in the sea? Not that I have ever been able to find.

So the polite answer I have for you is yes.
osiol   
25 Oct 2009
Study / POLISH CLASSROOM CHARACTERS? [3]

and feminine forms?

THE CLASS JOCK

I'll let Seanus, Szkotja2007, dtaylor and one or two others fight it out for that title. Does the Polish Pirate of Scotland, Bartolome still come here?
osiol   
24 Oct 2009
Language / How does Polish sound to you? How to make Polish sound more pleasurable? [100]

It doesn't have the Bond-villain/villainess sound of Slovakian or Russian and nor does it have the high-in-the-throat projection of many German accents. It's not a soft language but neither does it sound particularly harsh. By soft, I mean something like Brazilian Portuguese or the more standard forms of English. Harsh being various forms of Spanish or German (although certainly not all forms).

"Polish sounds so much better than English, when it comes from a girl's lips" said a noted personage once, but that may actually have more to do with the girl (and the lips) than the actual language itself.
osiol   
14 Oct 2009
News / The Lisbon Treaty and land reperations [74]

My own view is that unless every country that lost stuff as a result of WWII can claim back everything that it lost, then picking individual cases only creates greater unfairness for those alive today. There has to be a year zero across the board.
osiol   
11 Oct 2009
History / Solidarnosc (Two Decembers) [11]

vivid and detailed

I have a vivid and detailed knowledge of the spelling: Solidarność. Does that help?
osiol   
11 Oct 2009
Language / Your Funniest / Strangest / Sadest Moments with the Polish Language [63]

The difference between

But think of all the Poles who say they **** when they merely mean they can't.

missing a word for a king's daughter

I declared to my work colleagues recently that I am their rabbit.
I meant to say I was their king, but an extra syllable got in the way. Eek!
osiol   
10 Oct 2009
Feedback / How far we have come on this forum... [9]

I found it interesting to browse my early days here and see a lot of posts by myself and others that have vanished forever (or so some of us had thought). I had shown a fellow PF member some of this and the result was quite unnerving. Luckily, it doesn't save everything, but you never know quite what might be able to come back to haunt you.
osiol   
9 Oct 2009
Love / Why do Polish Women Think They Know Better? [134]

A Polish man told me that all Polish men can do plastering and hang doors. I still have a knobbly wall with tramlines and an upside down door to prove his point. Maybe a Polish woman had told him he could do it.
osiol   
9 Oct 2009
Language / Does this look right? (Cases reference); co? kto?/ czego? kogo? [8]

The accusative case indicates the direct object of a verb:

Kupiłem ten rower. (same ending as nominative)
Skręcz mi jednego papierosa.
Już kupiłeś tę dużą książkę?

Masculine:
confusing, so I'll let someone else explain and maybe I might learn something
sometimes it's the same as the nominative, sometimes the same as the genitive, but with grey areas in between.

Feminine
adjectives -ą
nouns -ę

Vocative (Wołacz)
functions de facto as nominative

There are differences.
You will hear kids call to their Mum the vocative "Mamo" rather than "Mama" which would be the nominative. This a > o change is quite common. I'm not sure if it works for all feminine nouns (and masculine nouns with the nominative ending in -a, eg. poeta > poeto).

If you call someone a dick, you call them the vocative ch**u rather than just ch**.
Ksiądz is priest. To address a priest vocatively, the word is księże. Once again, masculine nouns are more confusing. For names, it seems common enough to use the nominative.
osiol   
9 Oct 2009
Life / WHAT DO YOUNG POLES SEE IN RAP CRAP? [63]

the same fate as Disco

Retro chic amongst those who like brightly coloured things? At least the good stuff like Three Feet High and Rising might make a comeback.
osiol   
9 Oct 2009
Love / Why do Polish Women Think They Know Better? [134]

Why do Polish Women Think They Know Better?

Just because they do. A Polish woman told me that.
Still susceptible to the proverbial woman's prerogative though.
osiol   
8 Oct 2009
Language / Slang words like man, dude [29]

Where I work we use the words ślimak, leniwiec and baran more often. None of these mean dude or anything like that.
osiol   
8 Oct 2009
Life / WHAT DO YOUNG POLES SEE IN RAP CRAP? [63]

Hasn't anyone here ever heard rap used by artists as diverse as the Sugarcubes, Cleveland Watkiss or Sergio Mendes, in music from every inhabited continent on Earth and on subjects such as from "why doesn't everyone start being nice to each other for a change"? I'm listening to Funky 4+1 at the moment. Old skool (or stara szkoła as someone stranger than I am once said).
osiol   
2 Oct 2009
UK, Ireland / SHOCK NEWS - Polish man moves to Poland [9]

Any stories of guys who have come back and been disappointed, happy or reformed?

I occasionally hear from my former flatmate. He seems to neither regret coming to the UK nor returning to Poland.

sporadically

I think that just about sums it up.
osiol   
12 Sep 2009
Life / DO ADULT CHILDREN EXPLOIT THEIR PARENTS IN POLAND? [22]

As far as I know, it is more normal for Polish family homes to accomodate three generations under one roof. For many, the cost and practicability of moving out at the age of 18 is just not as reasonable as in some other countries. I have stayed with a family where there was a couple, their two grown-up sons and the husband's father all living together. I'm sure this family was exceptional in very few ways.

In Poland many adult married kids off on their own bring home their dirty laundry for mum to wash and iron.

Now that just doesn't sound normal. Surely?
osiol   
11 Sep 2009
Genealogy / Where can chalk be found in Poland's geological makeup? [4]

Thanks £K. That is a suprisingly large amount of chalk. I'm quite used to living over chalk overlain by a thick layer of glacial boulder clay which changes the character of the land greatly. Where exposed at the surface on a large scale, calcareous rocks produce some very interesting landforms. Glacial clay, to me, isn't very exciting.

My interest in chalk is related to my interest in geology, the huge percentage of my life spent living above chalk and how in some parts of the world, people have carved interesting shapes into the thin rendzinas that cover chalk escarpments. Rendzina is a soil-science word of Polish origin. Not many Polish words creep into the English language like that.
osiol   
6 Sep 2009
Genealogy / Where can chalk be found in Poland's geological makeup? [4]

Much chalk was laid down in the Cretaceous in a warm, shallow sea which stretched across parts of what are now northwestern Europe, allegedly stretching as far east as Poland. I know there can't be much outcropping chalk in Poland, but I would like to know if there is a chalk hillside somewhere.

By the way, I used to live beneath such a hill in a town called Westbury. I do not intend, however, to do any large-scale etching. I am a geologist.