The BEST Guide to POLAND
Unanswered  |  Archives 
 
 
User: Guest

Posts by jump_bunny  

Joined: 14 May 2009 / Female ♀
Last Post: 24 Jul 2014
Threads: Total: 5 / Live: 1 / Archived: 4
Posts: Total: 237 / Live: 75 / Archived: 162

Displayed posts: 76 / page 2 of 3
sort: Oldest first   Latest first   |
jump_bunny   
25 Aug 2009
Love / Polish Girls negative or positive personality trait? [267]

I stand corrected, the girls i've read multiple times are common as muck, that means Justysia and Wyspianska, the first is a classical Polish "village girl" and the other is the classical stuck up who thinks she's hot.

And you wish you had one of them.
jump_bunny   
13 Dec 2009
Life / nasza-klasa.pl - If you looking for your classmates or friends in Poland [95]

How can you change your setting on naza klaza so people dont see you have visited their page. Or can you ?

Of course you can. Go to Profil -> Edytuj Profil -> Prywatność. Untick the box that says: Nie pokazuj innym, że oglądałem ich profil (jednocześnie nie będziesz widzieć kto oglądał Twój profil) and confirm the changes clicking Zapisz. Nobody will be able to see you have viewed their profile yet you won't be informed about people viewing yours either. I hope it helps!

you can't. But some people create a 2nd profile 'John Smith' profile and then browse other people's pages logged in under this fictional 2nd account.

Possibly but how sad it that?
jump_bunny   
13 Dec 2009
Life / nasza-klasa.pl - If you looking for your classmates or friends in Poland [95]

It's kind of worse when you think of it - on Polishforums we don't normally really know each other, we don't provide any personal information such as our names, place and date of birth, schools we have attended to etc. Whereas on Nasza-Klasa creating an alter ego profile with fake information that is provided in order to spy on somebody, unambiguously means to me a violation of human privacy!
jump_bunny   
13 Dec 2009
Life / nasza-klasa.pl - If you looking for your classmates or friends in Poland [95]

I must agree with you - peadophiles have become a plague all over the Internet and only the thought of how those sick people can with ease have an open access to the personal information, as well as get in touch with kids, gives me sleepless nights! What exactly is being done to prevent this in case of NK?
jump_bunny   
13 Dec 2009
Life / nasza-klasa.pl - If you looking for your classmates or friends in Poland [95]

There is no magic solution but monitoring really helps.

I agree, unfortunately many parents don't like to know what they kids need the Internet for... Perhaps the access to social networking websites should not be allowed if you're under 18 but then again the forbiden fruit tastes the sweetest and there is no possible way to prove how old you are if you set up an Internet account. This wouldn't be something common when I was little. Blimey, I got my first mobile phone when I was 16!
jump_bunny   
14 Dec 2009
Life / Beggers namely Kurwa boys in Poland [70]

I had given 10 zl to a begger on the street of city where I study. He had sworn to me he needed it for food. Half an hour later, he was with me on the same train, offering cigarettes to other tramps. How jolly kind of him lol.
jump_bunny   
15 Dec 2009
Love / Insultive opinions about Polish girls... [139]

They flirting only, probably to gain experience for future serious relations like long term, marriage, etc. There, money speaks and rules the relations when serious relations are considered.

Listen birdy, you know nothing at all about Gaa's friends so on what grounds are you accusing them? It is unbelievably pathetic to read moans of an infantile little cockroach such as yourself slagging off the whole entire nation just so you can feel better about yourself. You are advised to start using auxiliary verbs too, you have a tendency to skip them and you sound like a complete retard. As for 'gold-diggers' as you put it - I know plenty of Polish women being with their partners who are poor. Yes, they often move to countries such as England or Germany (unlike you - we are ALLOWED to because Poland's part of the EU) and this proves nothing more than that there are often a very few jobs available for Poles in the areas where they come from. They are not necessarily looking for possible relationships. Now I would like you to apologise for the loads of crap you had said before and after you do this, please go back to Arabland where you belong together with your camels.

Aso, it really makes me wonder when the pointless threads such as this one will end. I'm sick to death listening about how Polish women are mysteriously different to other ones. Every nation is different with its culture and traditions but people's personality traits stay the same no matter where you come from.
jump_bunny   
15 Dec 2009
Love / Insultive opinions about Polish girls... [139]

Sorry about the typo, I have obviously meant 'also'. As for your question, I think it's obvious what I've been saying. The personality does not depend on nationality - you get bad and good people in virtually every country.
jump_bunny   
15 Dec 2009
News / What Poland can't do right [113]

How can you say What Poland can't do? If I think of something, I will post again.

Wow what a load of crap. Where do you gain this experience from? Where do you live and work?
jump_bunny   
15 Dec 2009
Love / Insultive opinions about Polish girls... [139]

Sweetie, I'm Polish myself. I unwaveringly think that any generalisations are evil to the core - positive ones or negative ones.

There are voices on this forum shouting 'Polish girls are the sexiest' but I'm not that type of a person who would take this as a compliment and I have a feeling that you're not either.
jump_bunny   
16 Dec 2009
News / What Poland can't do right [113]

From reading this foorum and this is how I get it. Where have you been, in school and haven't see world yet. You have no time to have fun. Doing your homeworks is boring

Blimey, and you, unlike me, have been bunking off school all the time hence you can't even speak English.
jump_bunny   
16 Dec 2009
News / What Poland can't do right [113]

It is not nice to talk about people poor English. You are teacher and you should know better.

Well, sorry birdy but you have happened to pick on me for studying. Now this was a stupid thing to do. Just because you are not educated yourself, it doesn't mean you are free to throw insults at people who put some effort into expanding new horizons rather than, what you seem to be good at, sitting and criticising Polish women and dwelling on what they wear. Get over this, you must be working in an environment full of manual workers (not as if there was something wrong with manual workers but you get this certain type of a person who's against education itself) so please, don't be surprised you get vain girls there - this has nothing to do with their nationality. In fact, you are filled with envy and you spreading your pathetic comments about Polish women is a proof itself that it's you who knows nothing about the world. Now, tell me, because I just can't wait to hear, where you are from.
jump_bunny   
16 Dec 2009
News / What Poland can't do right [113]

Wow you Polish birds really have your heads up your arse sometimes.

How? I've asked her a question.
jump_bunny   
17 Dec 2009
News / What Poland can't do right [113]

oh they do kick ass crisps too lays are realy good i usualy eat a few bags there when i go

I think you get them in the UK too, they're called Walkers there.
jump_bunny   
21 Dec 2009
Language / Usage rules of ł in the Polish language [30]

Very old people sometimes pronounce it in this way - I rather like the sound.

We now have phonemes /ł/ and /l/ rather than dark /l/ ,that used to be a veralised seperate speech sound, and clear /l/ which are both lateral approximants. We no longer use dark /l/ however, in British English, we distinguish those two quite easily: dark /l/ is used as words' final after a vowel and before a consonant, e.g. [bill], [help]. Clear /l/ is used before vowels and before a semivowel /j/, e.g. [leave], [blow], [silly]. Additionally, dark /l/ is also commonly used in American English, pretty much all the time I think.
jump_bunny   
21 Dec 2009
Language / Usage rules of ł in the Polish language [30]

Have you heard how a very old (but posh) person from the east of Poland pronounces it?

Unfortunately not however, my Phonology teacher likes to imitate that sound which I find really quite interesting!

This is also relatively easy to notice when listening an English native speaker pronouncing the word 'lull' - first /l/ is clear and second /l/ is dark.
jump_bunny   
24 Jan 2010
Language / iec conjugation [47]

This is really quite an interesting question. In the Polish language most infinitives end with -ć (and I really can't tell why some of them do end with -eć and others with -ać or -ść) but what I know is that only a few end with -c, (the ones in which a velar consonant 'k' or 'g' occurs in their conjugation) (for example: verb to be able to - c, I am able to - mogę, to help - pomóc, I help - pomagam, to say - rzec, he said - rzekł). This rule became a standard due to phonetic changes made during the proto-Slavic and Old Polish periods. Temporarily, in the nineteenth century, the trend occured to change the ending -c into -dz so the forms listed above would be spelled dz, pomódz, rzedz etc (Just like it happens with nouns, 'k' and 'g' changes into 'dz': leg - Nominative singular: noga - Dative singular: nodze; Nominative singular: droga - Dative singular: drodze etc). This tendency didn't last long and ended before 1918 since it was not justified in the historical development of the language - the infinitive's ending never goes into phonological alternation with the subject of the verb, this is how we know it is completely independent morpheme. Hence the standard of the nineteenth century was forgotten.
jump_bunny   
19 Jul 2010
Po polsku / Policzmy się! [80]

To sie porobilo na polishforums. Teraz juz i po polsku mozna pisac...
jump_bunny   
12 Nov 2010
Life / WHY DO POLES USE ENGLISH WORDS IN CONVERSATION? [396]

This is probably one of the most common word formation processes. It's called borrowing and is a huge sources of new words in English, that is the adoption of words from other languages – ‘piano’ is Italian, ‘robot’ is Czech and ”yoghurt’ is Turkish. Poles talk about ‘sport’, ‘klub’, ‘pub’ and many others...