kurwa is my favourite word of all time. I am not polish but my girlfriend is and when she says kurwa something inside of me lights up. I love the pronunciation and i love the effectiveness of use in any situation. My second favourite word is Jebany, an absolute cherry on top to the word kurwa. I just want to thank Poland and the Polish people for these amazing words, it's just a shame as an english speaker that this language is incredibly hard to learn and understand.
it is actually a Tibetan word, korwa, ཁོར་བ་, which means 'samsara'. Poles are well-aware of the fact that the history of Poland is basically about not being able to resist the attachment to this, and then to that, and then to both of them together, and the ensuing suffering, so they mention it all the time. I'm also sometimes tired of this life, korwa.
Polish is incredibly complex, with all these verbal forms and cases and whatnot. I can generally express myself fluently but, korwa, even ten years of practice is not enough to be able to pass for a native, and my mother tongue is Russian i.e. 70 per cent of the grammar and vocab are just the same.
now then, I would like to remind you, sirs, that we are all Slavic brothers here. let us not spit into each other's beards due to our differences. it is a sad thing what is happening, of course, and I think there is hardly a mother in Russia or Ukraine for that matter who would call her newborn child Vladimir, out of fear of the child being cursed by the Gods, Demigods, Humans, Animals, Hungry Ghosts, and even a part of the Communist realm dwellers, but please remember that there are people of other nationalities there, let us unite and hate them together instead of spreading hate and misunderstanding among Slavic brothers.
I myself was born in the traditional Polish lands of Smolensk and speak and love Polish, and I would not vote for Germans, unlike 30℅ of people who should be ashamed of themselves from Poland did, and therefore consider myself a Pole.
If there is a man among you who'll thwart me, speak or hold your peace.
I guess it is actually from 'smoke' - kuriti means 'to smoke' in Russian, and there were 'kurni' among Cossacks, meaning a camp with fires and smokes. it is just that when a liberal or a communist engages into sexual activities that the smoke rises up to the sky, and the Gods sometimes even switch on the rain, so they won't realize that they are being pissed upon from the sky; I am not sure why Gods do that though.
choinka is altogether another matter though. I think I know why there is a fir tree next to each Russian police station. they probably worship it sometimes - unfortunately, there is a dark side to Slavic paganism as well, as well as Christmas of course.