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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 3 of 104
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osiol   
27 Aug 2009
Language / Possibly, probably, definitely, certainly not. [6]

What is the possibility anyone could add somethin to this list as put it in order of probability?

na pewno - certainly
chyba - probably
prawdopodobnie - probably
może tak, może nie - maybe, maybe not
ni ch**a - no way

Could someone also clear up usage of "może", "może być" and "możliwy"?
osiol   
27 Aug 2009
Feedback / Why do you keep coming back to PolishForums? [13]

I have, in the past, said that I'd ignore PF for a while, but I don't think I have ever stated that I'd leave. If I say that I would leave, I would say so knowing that I'd have to go back on my word, either brazenly returning as Osiol, or sheepishly under a new name. Osiol is a good name, so I wouldn't like to give it up, but I do have plenty of other good ideas.

I have now met two other members of Polish Forums as a result of being here. Most, if not all of whom seem to be very nice people.

crown

Is it a crown or is it a very small sombrero? Sombrerito? Somrerko? Mały duży meksykański kapelusz.
osiol   
27 Aug 2009
Feedback / Why do you keep coming back to PolishForums? [13]

I came here more when I was more actively learning Polish and when internet forums were a new thing to me. I think I came here slightly less when I was busy having a Polish girlfriend, then (strangely) even less than that when I had the second of two Polish lodgers living in my flat. Really, I'm not as interested in all this stuff as I was, although I do come back just to see what's going on and to remind myself of how forum addicts spend their lives. I am almost cured.
osiol   
22 Aug 2009
Food / What Polish food or drink do you not like and why? [37]

galaretka

This reminds me of the jellied eel I once had at New Year. Despite liking so many things normally associated with London, I don't like jellied eel and I hadn't expected it to be a Polish dish either.

I also don't like Polish beer in a can. That's mostly because I don't like any beer that comes in a can, so it's not specifically a Polish food and drink issue.
osiol   
15 Aug 2009
Love / Polish Girls Reputation [231]

The Polish Forums Anthem may enlighten some people about Polish girls and how they are perceived both by themselves and by others.

w754.wrzuta.pl/audio/06DsniQa5LS/pf_anthem - Polish Forums Anthem
osiol   
6 Aug 2009
Language / PRONUNCIATION OF ENGLISH WORDS IN POLAND [24]

Since when was Cillit an English word? Doesn't it look weird in a lot of different languages?

There are accents in English where the g is pronounced distinctly at the end of the ng sound.
osiol   
17 Jul 2009
History / Are Poles the ones who understand Russians better than anyone? [35]

Russians know Russians better than Poles know Russians.

Or do they?

I'm English and I don't understand the English. Plenty of people here claim to know better, both from here and from abroad.

Who, in this case, constitute Russians? The so-called ethnic Russians or people of the Russian Federation generally, both Russian and non-Russian? I've read plenty of Dostoevsky and a bit of Russian and Finno-Ugric history, but don't usually claim that makes me any sort of expert in the field.
osiol   
11 Jul 2009
UK, Ireland / Friend told "just allow your son to forget Polish" by school. [96]

Supposedly if you speak a second language to your child they are likely to pick up on any mistakes you make. So it is better to speak your first language with the child.

My ex-girlfriend's English is very poor. Her kids are learning much quicker, but hearing their mother making mistakes could be confusing. Mothers in children's eyes are all-knowing and all-powerful. Hearing mistakes does indeed make problems. If anything, she should actually learn English from her children.

If she was told by a teacher that she should speak English in the family home, her answer would probably be something like "no understand" and if she did understand, I'm sure she would disagree. Watching English instead of Polish TV would make a much bigger and better difference.
osiol   
7 Jul 2009
Language / Example sentences for different cases. [42]

am I just confusing things?

Both you and the Polish language are confusing things. Luckily, although Polish is confusing, it has its own internal consistency and logic.

"To jest..." is a phrase on its own, independent of what it might actually be in gender terms. Use of the word jest leads to the noun that "to" is being instrumental.

To jest kobietą.

Now someone else will tell me I'm wrong.
osiol   
28 Jun 2009
Language / The Dative Case [62]

Dzień dobry. Dawaj osłu marchewę.
osiol   
22 Jun 2009
UK, Ireland / Polish meat in English supermarkets? [73]

How much Polish food is the same stuff but with Polish writing on it? It's an easy way to make money out of people.

99% of Poles I've met hate English food.

Even curry! ;)

I cooked a curry that found its way very happily into a Polish stomach.

Us Scots tend to be more open to foreign food when we travel.

But I'm more open to foreign food than you, and you're Scottish and I'm English. Where does that leave everyone?
osiol   
13 Jun 2009
UK, Ireland / England, Dirty, Expensive and a dangerous place to live? [205]

I'll be awarding points and they're not cheap ones either. I went to town and spent a bit of money on them (they're all quite expensive over here). As English points, they may require a bit of cleaning. Only if you're really unlucky will these (or those) points turn against you. Points can be dangerous. They're quite pointy.

I'm supposed to move my fridge into the front garden. (See how we have now shifted from the pataphysical world back into one that seems to be rooted in reality, if only temporarily). I need to put a sign on it saying:

Free fridge, in good working order, ideal for cheese, beer, milk, beer, butter, bacon, beer and beer. Please take it before it rains.
osiol   
20 May 2009
History / Poland: dont blame us its the Germans. [174]

your mother was not half-deaf because there were bombs falling when she was walking on her first day of school

My mother had been going to schhol for a couple of years before bombs started falling where she lived. There were still "bombsites" in cities for years after the second world war. The reason I don't know what my grandparents' generation did during this war, was because despite how some of the popular culture depicts them, most did not like to talk about it because of the absolute horror or war and so many friends and family members, particularly young men, had been killed.

Many did emigrate after the second world war, to countries like Australia, New Zealand and Canada because there was nothing left in Britain for them. The economy wasn't good, so many houses had been destroyed and there was rationing for years after the war had ended.

No-one can justify blaming anyone who was not guilty of actually doing anything. Blaming descendents of those who had done wrong is just pure idiocy.
osiol   
20 May 2009
News / Nobility / Aristocracy in Poland ? [92]

Patriotic= Love your country
Unpatriotic = not loving your country

This only works if one's country is a "fatherland" if one's country is a "motherland" then logically one would have to be matriotic.

In English, being non-person nouns, countries are usually rendered as neuter, but like boats and other vessels, they can be referred to in the feminine. Also, Britannia is feminine. Polska is feminine. La France is feminine. So instantly most posters on this thread should find patriotism an impossibility.

- Lord Osiol of Donkeyshire
osiol   
19 May 2009
News / Nobility / Aristocracy in Poland ? [92]

Most Polish nobility mixed with population ... and ... communism

There were some who left Poland as well as many who didn't.

Right at the top of the nobility is monarchy. There are many drama queens on this forum, but most couldn't be classified as noble.
osiol   
19 May 2009
Language / Inability to roll r's considered a 'lisp' in Polish? [4]

The most common lisp is probably the s-lisp (or lithp). Having both the s-lisp and the r-lisp should mark a Polish person out to be a good candidate for speaking English quite well.

I can pronounce my Polish r properly (usually), and I can roll my tongue and turn it on it's side. Sometimes I can hold my tongue so I don't have to bite my lip or eat my words.
osiol   
17 May 2009
Language / Difference between zbyt and za [11]

I have tried saying "zbyt" instead of "za", but I don't feel comfortable with it. When trying to say something is toooooo big, tooooo bright, TOOOOOOO messed up or whatever, "za" seems easier to intonate in a way that makes it sound toooooo this or toooo that. "Zbyt" sounds like such a little word whereas "za" can sound quite big. That is to my ears anyway.
osiol   
16 May 2009
Language / Difference between Polish Ł and English W [23]

too lazy to pronounce L

Most of the English are too lazy to pronounce the letter R before a consonant too. Poles are so lazy, they couldn't be bothered to keep the dual number or some of the old verb tenses. The French are really lazy, only pronouncing about half of each word as it appears written down. Actually, we're all lazy.