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Posts by Zazulka  

Joined: 13 Aug 2011 / Female ♀
Last Post: 23 Aug 2015
Threads: Total: 3 / In This Archive: 2
Posts: Total: 128 / In This Archive: 105
From: Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Speaks Polish?: yes

Displayed posts: 107 / page 4 of 4
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Zazulka   
10 Oct 2011
Language / Polish insult that sounds kinda like " e sha vees ta" ? [16]

Idź się wysraj i 100% Polish and dosn't come from some dialect.
This is not a nice reply to someone who according to us speaks crap. And it is still quite common in Polish language.

Mijimaes:
jaja pronounced yaya are eggs in Polish or testicles
dziadzia pronounced jaja is grandpa in Polish
Zazulka   
23 Sep 2011
Language / Miłość, how to decline it in the accusative? [9]

Oops, I referred above to a wrong rule :) Time to go to bed :)

The correct rule is: accusative is the same as the nominative case when a feminine noun ends with a consonant: mysz, zlość, straż etc.
Zazulka   
23 Sep 2011
Language / Miłość, how to decline it in the accusative? [9]

accusative is the same as the nominative case when a noun has no plural form eg: miłość, nienawiść, zawiść, złość, szlachetność, hojność and so on
Zazulka   
18 Sep 2011
Language / Do you know what "farfocle" means? [11]

As far as i know it is the same as farfocel. I am not aware of any different meaning or slang.

Original meaning of farfocel (XVI century): lint collected in a belly button. :)
Zazulka   
18 Sep 2011
Language / Polish regional accents? [141]

Are there any regions in Polska today, which still speak with the pre-war accent?

Actually, this characteristic pronunciation in Polish movies before the war wasn’t the pronunciation of the majority of Poles. It is called kresowa pronunciation (Kresy part of Ukraine and Belarus that were a part of Poland before the war). Kresowa pronunciation was the only allowed and acceptable pronunciation in movies and on stage (why?? don't no). Some actors, not from Kresy, had to learn it. This pronunciation was the only allowed and mandatory to learn by all students of the Polish Film and Theatre School until the sixties, but later abonded as, I guess, less and less Poles spoke like that naturally (Kresy not longer Polish).

I simply adore it.. especially in songs sung by Eugeniusz Bodo and Mieczysław Fogg, for instance. :(

Interestingly, Eugeniusz Bodo wasn’t Polish. He was born in Geneva and was a Swiss citizen. I believe he learned Polish later in his childhood (not sure about it). Being officially a Swiss citizen didn’t save him from the Soviets during the war. He was arrested by the Russians and transported to a gulag in Siberia where he died from hunger before the war ended.
Zazulka   
17 Sep 2011
Language / Chcę and chce [21]

RobiĘ to co chcĘ

Fur sure it shouldn't be pronounced like Robie to co chce.

Yes, ę has lost half of its nosowość but not all. Lubaś W., Urbańczyk S., Podręczny słownik poprawnej wymowy polskiej, Warszawa 1990
Some nosowość should still be heard in RobiĘ to co chcĘ and you are right, not like it sounds in French. Loosing nosowość completely is simply a sloppy speech.
Zazulka   
17 Sep 2011
Language / Chcę and chce [21]

Sometimes chcę is pronounced as chcem. I believe this pronunciation is common in the areas where immigrants from Vilno settled after the war.
Lech Wałęsa is famous for pronouncing chcę as chcem. He famous for saying: Nie chcem, ale muszem.
Zazulka   
17 Sep 2011
Language / Chcę and chce [21]

In theory both are not pronounced the same but in practice they are.

I never do.
Ę pronounced as E comes from the Wielkopolski dialekt. So in the western part of Poland ę and e sound the same very often.
Zazulka   
17 Sep 2011
Language / Chcę and chce [21]

No, they are pronouced differently
ę en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C4%98

Ja chcę ( I want)
On chce (He wants)
Zazulka   
14 Sep 2011
Language / dziękuję za lekcji/dziękuję za lekcję? za takes dopełniacz/biernik/celownik? [20]

czy możesz ci

Full sentence, please. This sounds weird and unlogical to me and can't think of any sentence with such construction. Maybe you mean czy mogę ci (pomóc jakoś?)

Or maybe he wanted to say: czy możesz sobie ?
Czy możesz sobie odgrzać wczorajszy obiad, ja nie mam dzisiaj czasu gotować?
Zazulka   
14 Sep 2011
Genealogy / Ziarko's from Opatow - searching for relatives in Poland [4]

According to the website moikrewni.pl there are 81 people with the last name Ziarko living in Opatów and 42 in the neighbouring Sandomierz. You will need more info like first names, age, etc to locate the right people
Zazulka   
23 Aug 2011
Genealogy / Tywoshewska, Kashawz Trying to find out where my grandmother is really from [6]

Tarnopol is a town in Ukraine now, but for centuries, until 1945 Tarnopol was Polish. According to Wikipedia “In 1939 it was a city of 40,000; 50% of the population was Polish, 40% Jewish and 10% Ukrainian”.

It looks like your Grandmother’s name was spelled incorectly on documents. Tywoshewska doesn’t sound right. Most likely her last name was Tymoshewska, in Polish spelled Tymoszewska.

If your Grandmother’s family was sent to a labor camp then they weren’t Jews (Germans were sending Jews to concentration camps, not labour camps). There were very few Ukrainians living in Tarnopol at that time. Therefore most likely your Grandmother was Polish, and her last name was Tymoszewska.

Tarnopol is about 450 kms from Krakow. The closest larger town to Tarnopol is Lvov, but not many people, especially from outside Europe know where Lvov is, then the next large city to describe location of Tarnopol would logically be Krakow.
Zazulka   
14 Aug 2011
Po polsku / Co sądzicie o Polakami noszą koszulki z logami w języku Polskim? [26]

i jakos nie zwracam na nie uwagi u innych.
Przepraszam, nie rozumiem, mogłabyś napisać to w inny sposób?

and somehow I don't pay attention to it in others
There is no other way to say it in Polish .. or maybe...nie zwracam uwagi czy inni maja koszulki z polskim logo
BTW ( in Polish logo is always singular ...never logi, logami etc always logo. koszulki z polskim logo )