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Polish language


Polish (jezyk polski, polszczyzna) is the official language of Poland. It is the West Slavic language having the greatest number of speakers . Polish is spoken in a uniform manner through most of Poland, and has a regular orthography. The language developed indigenously and retains many ancient Slavic features of pronunciation and grammar. Although the Polish language was suppressed by occupying powers during some historical periods, a rich literature has nonetheless developed over the centuries, and many works by Polish authors are available in translations in English and other languages.

Statistics


Polish is the official language of Poland; it is spoken chiefly by the Poles, who make up most of the 38 million inhabitants of Poland (census 2002). There are also native speakers of Polish in western Belarus and Ukraine (see: Kresy), as well as eastern Lithuania (in the area of Vilnius), southeastern Latvia (around Daugavpils), northern Romania (see: Polish minority in Romania), and the northeastern part of Czech Republic (see: Zaolzie). Because of emigration from Poland in various periods, millions of Polish-speakers now live in countries such as Germany, France, Ireland, Australia, Mexico, Israel, Brazil, Iceland, the United Kingdom, United States, etc. The estimated number of Poles who live beyond the borders of Poland is 21 million. It is not clear, however, how many of them can actually speak Polish - the estimates range from 3.5 to 10 million1. Walczak, Bogdan, 2001. Jezyk polski na Zachodzie Jerzy Bartminski (ed.). Wspólczesny jezyk polski. Lublin.: Wydawnictwo UMCS. 2. Price, Glanville (ed.), 2001. Encyclopedia of the languages of Europe. Oxford, Malden.: Blackwell Publishers. 3. Rothstein, Robert A., 2002. Polish Comrie, Bernard and Corbett, Greville, G. (ed.). The Slavonic Languages. First edition in paperback (first published 1993). London and New York.: Routledge.. This puts the number of native speakers of Polish worldwide at between 40 and 48 million. According to Ethnologue, there are about 43 million first language speakers of Polish worldwideGordon, Raymond G., Jr. (ed.), 2005. Ethnologue: Languages of the World, Fifteenth edition. Dallas, Tex.: SIL International. Online version: http://www.ethnologue.com/..

Polish has the second largest number of speakers among Slavic languages after Russian. It is the main representative of the Lechitic branch of the West Slavic languages. The Polish language is indigenous to Poland, having developed within its current territory from several local Western Slavic dialects, most notably those spoken in Greater Poland and Lesser Poland. It shares some vocabulary with the languages of the neighboring Slavic nations, most notably with Slovak, Czech, Ukrainian, and Belarusian.

History


The precursor to the Polish language is the Old Polish language.

Polish was a lingua franca from 1500 to 1700 in small parts of Central and large areas of Eastern Europe, because of the political, cultural, scientific and military influence of the powerful Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.

Geographic distribution


Polish is mainly spoken in Poland. Poland is one of the most European countries with regard to its mother tongue; nearly 97% of Poland's citizens declare Polish as their mother tongue, due to World War II, after which Poland was forced to change its borders, which resulted in various migrations (German expulsions). After the Second World War the previously Polish territories annexed by the USSR retained a large amount of the Polish population that was unwilling or unable to migrate toward the post-1945 Poland, and even today ethnic Poles constitute large minorities in Lithuania, Belarus, and Ukraine.
Polish is by far the most widely used minority language in Lithuania's Vilnius County (26% of the population, according to the 2001 census results), and it is also present in other counties. In Ukraine, Polish is most often used in the Lviv and Lutsk regions. Western Belarus has an important Polish minority, especially in the Brest and Grodno regions.

There are also significant numbers of Polish speakers in Argentina, Andorra, Australia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Belgium, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Faroe Islands, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Israel, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Luxembourg, Mexico, The Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, South Africa, Sweden, Peru, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Slovakia, Spain, Ukraine, UAE, the UK, Uruguay and the United States.

In the United States, Americans of Polish descent number more than 11 million, see: Polish language in the United States, but most of them cannot speak Polish. According to the United States 2000 Census, 667,414 Americans of age 5 years and over reported Polish as the language spoken at home, which is about 1.4% of people who speak languages other than English or 0.25% of the U.S. population.

Dialects


The Polish language became far more homogeneous in the second half of the 20th century, in part due to the mass migration of several million Polish citizens from the eastern to the western part of the country after the east was annexed by the Soviet Union in 1939, during World War II.

"Standard" Polish is still spoken somewhat differently in different regions of the country, although the differences between these broad "dialects" are slight. There is never any difficulty in mutual understanding, and non-native speakers are generally unable to distinguish among them easily. The differences are slight compared to different dialects of English, for example.
The regional differences correspond mainly to old tribal divisions from around a thousand years ago; the most significant of these in terms of numbers of speakers are Great Polish (spoken in the west), Lesser Polish (spoken in the south and southeast), Mazovian (Mazur) spoken throughout the central and eastern parts of the country, and Silesian spoken in the southwest. Mazovian shares some features with the Kashubian language (see below).

Some more characteristic but less widespread regional dialects include:
The distinctive Góralski (highlander) dialect is spoken in the mountainous areas bordering the Czech and Slovak Republics. The Górale (highlanders) take great pride in their culture and the dialect. It has some cultural influences from the Vlach shepherds who migrated from Wallachia (southern Romania) in the 14th-17th centuries. The language of the coextensive East Slavic ethnic group, the Lemkos, which demonstrates significant lexical and grammatical commonality with the Góralski dialect, bears no significant Vlach or other Romanian influences. Most urban Poles find it difficult to understand this very distinct dialect.
In the western and northern regions that were largely resettled by Poles from the territories annexed by the Soviet Union, the older generation speaks a dialect of Polish characteristic of the Eastern Borderlands.
The Kashubian language, spoken in the Pomorze region west of Gdansk on the Baltic sea, is closely related to Polish, and was once considered a dialect by some. However, the differences are significant enough to merit its classification as a separate language; for instance, it is not readily understandable to Polish speakers unless written. There are about 53,000 speakers according to the 2002 census.
Poles living in Lithuania (particularly in the Vilnius region), Belarus (particularly the northwest), and in the northeast of Poland continue to speak the Eastern Borderlands dialect which is more "slushed", and is easily distinguishable.
Some city dwellers, especially the less affluent population, had their own distinctive dialects. An example of this is the Warsaw dialect, still spoken by some of the population of Praga, on the eastern bank of the Vistula. (Praga was the only part of the city whose population survived World War II somewhat intact.) However, these city dialects are now mostly extinct due to assimilation with standard Polish.
Many Poles living in emigrant communities, e.g. in the USA, whose families left Poland just after World War II, retain a number of minor features of Polish vocabulary as it was spoken in the first half of the 20th century, but which now sound archaic to contemporary visitors from Poland.

Phonology


The Polish vowel system is relatively simple with only six oral and two nasal vowels. The Polish consonant system is more complicated and its characteristic features are the series of affricates and palatal consonants that resulted from four Proto-Slavic palatalizations and two further palatalizations which took place in Polish and Belarusian. The stress falls generally on the penultimate (second to last) syllable.

Orthography



The Polish alphabet is based on the Latin alphabet but uses diacritics, such as kreska (graphically similar to acute accent), kropka (superior dot) and ogonek. Unlike other Latin-character Slavic languages (apart from Kashubian), Polish did not adopt a version of the Czech orthography, but developed one independently.

Note that Polish , , , are laminal postalveolar and may perhaps be most accurately transcribed using the IPA retracted diacritic as , , , respectively. Also note that Polish n (transcribed here ) is not palatal; it has the same articulation place as or . However, as the IPA does not have a symbol for a nasal alveolo-palatal consonant, it would perhaps be more accurately transcribed as .

The letters Q (ku), V (fau) and X (iks) do not belong to the Polish alphabet but they are used in some commercial names and foreign words. In Polish pronunciation there is no need for them. They are replaced with K, W and KS/GZ respectively.

Polish orthography also includes seven digraphs:

Note that although the Polish orthography is mostly phonetic-morphological, some sounds may be written in more than one way:

as either h or ch
as either z or rz (though rz denotes a cluster)
as either u or ó
soft consonants are spelt either c, dz, n, s, z, or ci, dzi, ni, si, zi (c, n etc. are spelt before a consonant or at the end of a word, whereas ci, ni etc. are used before vowels a, a, e, e, o, u; c, dz, n, s, z alone are used before i.)

Two consonants rz are very rarely read as "r z", not , as in words "zamarzac" (to get frozen), "marznac" (to feel cold) or in the name "Tarzan".

The pronunciation of geminates (doubled consonants) in Polish should not be pronounced as one being prolonged, as in Finnish and Italian, but it happens often in spoken language. When pronouncing a word slowly and carefully, Polish speakers articulate and release each of the two consonants separately. The prolongation is therefore rather a repetition of the consonant. For example, the word panna (young lady/maiden) is not read the same way as pana (mr.'s/master's), but should be pronounced pan-na, with two n. This includes not only native Polish words (like panna or oddech), but also loan-words (lasso, attyka). In Polish, geminates may appear in the beginning of a word, as in czczenie (worshipping), dzdzownica (earth-worm), ssak (mammal), wwóz (importation), zstapic (to descend; to step down), and zza (from behind; from beyond) but never appear in the end of a word of slavic origin.

Nouns and adjectives



Polish is highly inflected and retains the Old Slavic case system with seven cases for nouns, pronouns, and adjectives: nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, instrumental, locative and vocative. There are two number classes, singular and plural.

As in many Slavic languages, including Russian, there are no definite or indefinite articles in Polish.

The Polish gender system, like Russian and almost all the other Balto-Slavic languages, is complex, due to its combination of three categories: gender (masculine, feminine, neuter), personhood (personal versus non-personal) and animacy (animate versus inanimate). Personhood and animacy are relevant within the masculine gender but do not affect the feminine or neuter genders. The resulting system can be presented as comprising five gender classes: personal masculine, animate (non-personal) masculine, inanimate masculine, feminine, and neuter. These classes can be identified based on declension patterns, adjective-noun agreement, and pronoun-antecedent agreement.

The gender classes are characterized by the following inflectional properties (with rare exceptions):
Personal masculine: accusative = genitive (both singular and plural), distinctive nominative plural ending
Animate (non-personal) masculine: nominative singular ending in a consonant (nouns), accusative singular = genitive singular, accusative plural = nominative plural
Inanimate masculine: nominative singular ending in a consonant (nouns), accusative = nominative (singular and plural)
Neuter: nominative singular in "-o" or "-e", genitive singular in "-a" (nouns), accusative = nominative (singular and plural)
Feminine: dative singular = locative singular, accusative plural = nominative plural.
To determine correct adjective-noun agreement, only four genders need to be distinguished in the singular (classes 1 and 2 can be combined), and only two genders are needed in the plural (class 1 contrasting with 2-3-4-5 combined). For correct pronoun selection, the gender system can be further simplified to three classes in the singular, and two in the plural. The following table shows which 3rd person nominative pronoun corresponds to nouns of each gender class:

Verbs


Polish verbs are inflected according to gender as well as person and number, but the tense forms have been simplified through elimination of three old tenses (the aorist, imperfect, and past perfect). The so-called Slavic perfect is the only past tense form used in common speech. In Polish, one distinguishes between
three tenses (present, past and future)
three moods (indicative, imperative and conditional)
three voices (active, passive and reflexive).

Aspect is a grammatical category of the verb, and almost all Polish verbs have two aspects, in each tense. One imperfective (often translated as a progressive tense in English with -ing, for example 'was going', 'is going', "will be going") and one perfective (often translated as a simple tense in English, for example 'went', 'go' 'will go').

The tenses include:

Movable suffixes (those of the past tenses) are usually attached to the verb or to the most accented word of a sentence, like question preposition.

The fifth Polish tense, the future imperfective, is an analytic form, and consists of the simple future form of the auxiliary verb byc ‘to be’ (bede, bedziesz...), and either infinitive or past participle (imperfective). The choice between bedziecie robic and bedziecie robili is free, and both forms have the same meaning.

Sometimes the sentence may be emphasised with a particle -ze- (-z).

So what have you done? can be:

Co zrobiliscie?
Coscie zrobili?
Cózescie zrobili? (a form that could be derived from Cóz zrobiliscie?, which actually sounds archaic and is not often used, except for eg. biblical usage)
Co zescie zrobili? (though almost identical, this form is incorrect. Many Poles nowadays make the mistake (in Cracow region it is naturally spoken with "ze")of putting unnecessary "ze" with the past tense suffix, e.g. Wczoraj zem to kupil. instead of Kupilem to wczoraj. (I bought it yesterday.) Better educated Poles consider such sentences to be coarse. Sometimes it may seem they contain the -z(e) particle, but in most cases the unnecessary -ze does not bring any emphasis.)

(It is also well worth noticing that the two latter forms - "coscie zrobili?" and "co zescie zrobili?" often carry a negative emotional load, a possible translation of these examples being "what (the hell) have you done!?" The third form, using "zescie", would be even stronger - fitting for situations involving desperation, etc. (and indeed being a little archaic))

All the above examples show inflected forms of the verb "zrobic" for the subject "you" informal plural ("wy"). However, it is worthy of notice that none of the above examples includes the subject itself. The inclusion of the subject is not necessary here because Polish is a pro-drop language. This means that with an inflected verb the subject does not need to be mentioned. Instead, the reader or listener can tell, by the ending on the verb, which is different for each person, singular and plural, what is the implied subject. Because the subject can be dropped, using it with an inflected verb signals emphasis. Of the above three examples, a native speaker would not include the subject in the middle sentence and would be unlikely to include the subject in the last one. The examples below show how the subject could be included in such sentences, where possible:

Co wy zrobiliscie?
Coscie zrobili? (a native speaker would not use a subject here)
Co wyscie zrobili? (this example emphasizes the pronoun -- "wy"+scie)
Co zescie zrobili? (this example emphasizes the ze- particle, but it is not correct in a written form) (The mentioned correctness could be subject to an argument. It is clearly not an "official language" form, no apparent reason I can see for deeming its written form as incorrect, though.)

The past participle depends on number and gender, so the third person, past perfect tense, can be:
- singular
zrobil (he made/did)
zrobila (she made/did)
zrobilo (it made/did)
- plural
zrobili (they made/did {men, people of both sexes})
zrobily (they made/did {women, children})

Word order


Basic word order in Polish is SVO, however, as it is a synthetic language, it is possible to move words around in the sentence, and to drop the subject, object or even sometimes verb, if they are obvious from context.

These sentences mean more or less the same ("Alice has a cat"), but different shades of meaning are emphasized by selecting different word orders. In increasing order of markedness:

Ala ma kota - Alicia has a cat
Ala kota ma - Alicia does have (own) a cat (and has not borrowed it)
Kota ma Ala - The/a cat is owned by Alicia
Ma Ala kota - Alicia really does have a cat
Kota Ala ma - It is just the cat that Alicia really has
Ma kota Ala - The relationship of Alicia to the cat is one of ownership (and not temporary possession)

However, only the first three examples sound natural in Polish, and others should be used for special emphasis only, if at all.

If a question mark is added to the end of those sentences they will all mean "does Alicia have a cat?"; an optional 'czy' could be added to the beginning (but native speakers do not always use it).

If apparent from context, the subject, object or even the verb, can be dropped:

Ma kota - can be used if it is obvious who is the person talked about
Ma - short answer for "Czy Ala ma kota?" (as in "Yes, she does")
Ala - answer for "Kto ma kota?" (as in "Alicia does")
Kota - answer for "Co ma Ala?" (as in "The cat")
Ala ma - (as in "Alicia does one") answer for "Kto z naszych znajomych ma kota?" ("Who among our acquaintances has a cat?")

Note the interrogative particle "czy", which is used to start a yes/no question, much like the French "est-ce que". The particle is not obligatory, and sometimes rising intonation is the only signal of the interrogative character of the sentence: "Ala ma kota?".

There is a tendency in Polish to drop the subject rather than the object as it is uncommon to know the object but not the subject. If the question were "Kto ma kota?" (Who has a/the cat?), the answer should be "Ala" alone, without a verb.

In particular, "ja" (I) and "ty" (you, singular), and their plural equivalents "my" (we) and "wy" (you, plural), are almost always dropped, much like the respective Spanish pronouns.

Conjugation



Conjugation of "byc" (to be) in the present tense:

Ja jestem - I am
Ty jestes - You are (familiar singular)
On/ona/ono jest - He/she/it is
My jestesmy - We are
Wy jestescie - You are (plural)
Oni/one sa - They are (masculine/feminine)

Pan/Pani jest - You are (masculine/feminine, singular, polite)
Panstwo sa - You are (plural, both sexes together, polite)
Panowie sa - You are (plural, masculine, polite)
Panie sa - You are (plural, feminine, polite)

Conjugation of "byc" (to be) in the past tense:

Ja bylem/bylam - I (masculine/femine) was
Ty byles/bylas - You (masculine/feminine) were
On byl/ona byla/ono bylo - He/she/it was
My bylismy/bylysmy - We (masculine/feminine) were
Wy byliscie/bylyscie - You (masculine/feminine) were (plural)
Oni byli/one byly - They (masculine/femenine) were
Pan/Pani byl/byla - You were (masculine/feminine, singular, polite)
Panstwo byli - You were (plural, both sexes together, polite)
Panowie byli - You were (plural, masculine, polite)
Panie byly - You were (plural, feminine, polite)

Past tense for verbs is usually made this way, by replacing the infinitive final "-c" with "-l(+V)".

Conjugation of "isc" ("to go, walk" in the present tense):

Ja ide – I am going
Ty idziesz – You are going (singular)
On/ona/ono idzie – He/she/it is going
My idziemy – We are going
Wy idziecie – You are going (plural)
Oni/one ida – They are going ("oni" masculine personal, "one" feminine, neuter, masculine animate or masculine inanimate)
Pan/Pani idzie - You are going (masculine/feminine, singular, polite)
Panstwo ida - You are going (plural, both sexes together, polite)
Panowie ida - You are going (plural, masculine, polite)
Panie ida - You are going (plural, feminine, polite)

Conjugation of "isc" ("to go, walk" in the past imperfect tense):
Ja szedlem - (masculine) - Ja szlam (feminine) - I was going
Ty szedles - (masculine) - Ty szlas (feminine) - you were going
On szedl - (masculine) - Ona szla (feminine) - Ono wszlo (neutral) - He/she/it was going
Pan szedl - (masculine) - Pani szla (feminine) - You were going (polite)
My szlismy (inf mysmy szli) - (masculine, masculine + feminine, masculine + neutral)- We were going
My szlysmy (inf, mysmy szly) - (feminine + feminine) - We were going
Wy szliscie (inf. wyscie szli) - (masculine, masculine + feminine, masculine + neutral)- You were going
Wy szlyscie (inf. wyscie szly) - (feminine + feminine) - We were going
Oni szli - (masculine, masculine + feminine, masculine + neutral)- They were going
One szly - (feminine + feminine) - They were going
Panstwo szli - (masculine, masculine + feminine, masculine + neutral)- You were going (polite)
Panie szly - (feminine + feminine) - You were going (polite)

In Polish, the use of personal pronouns to mark the subject is not necessary because flexed word contains such information. Therefore, one may omit the personal pronouns as follows, while retaining the same meaning:
Ide (= I am going)
Idziesz (= You are going)
Idzie (= She/He/It is going)
Idziemy (= We are going)
Idziecie (= You are going)
Ida (= They are going)

Borrowed words


Polish has, over the centuries, borrowed a large number of words from other languages. Borrowed words have been usually rapidly adapted in the following ways:
Their spelling was usually altered to approximately keep the pronunciation, but have them written according to Polish phonetics.
Word endings are liberally applied to almost any word to produce verbs, nouns, adjectives, as well as adding the appropriate endings for cases of nouns, diminutives, augmentatives, etc.

Depending on the historical period, borrowing has proceeded from various languages. Recent borrowing is primarily of "international" words from the English language, mainly those that have Latin or Greek roots, for example komputer (computer), produkcja (production), korupcja (corruption) etc. Slang sometimes borrows and alters common English words, e.g. luknac (to look), but these borrowings are usually short lived, going out of fashion after several years. Concatenation of parts of words (e.g. auto-moto), which is not native to Polish but common in e.g. English, is also sometimes used.
When borrowing international words, Polish often changes their spelling. For example, Latin suffix '-tion' corresponds to -cja. To make the word plural, -cja becomes -cje. Examples of this include inauguracja (inauguration), dewastacja (devastation), konurbacja (conurbation) and konotacje (connotations). Also, the digraph qu becomes kw (kwadrant = quadrant; kworum = quorum).

Other notable influences in the past have been Latin (9th-18th century), Czech (10th and 14th-15th century), Italian (15th-16th century), French (18th-19th century), German (13-15th and 18th-20th century, Hungarian (14th-16th century), Turkish (17th century), Old Belarusian, Ukrainian, and Russian.

The Latin language, for a very long time the only official language of the Polish state, has had a great influence on Polish. Many Polish words (rzeczpospolita from res publica, zdanie for both "opinion" and "sentence", from sententia) were direct calques from Latin.

Many words have been borrowed from the German language, as a result of being neighbours for a millennium, and also due to a sizable German population in Polish cities since medieval times.

The regional dialects of Upper Silesia and Masuria (Modern Polish East Prussia) have noticeably more German loanwords than other dialects. Latin was known to a larger or smaller degree by most of the numerous szlachta in the 16th to 18th centuries (and it continued to be extensively taught at secondary schools until World War II). Apart from dozens of loanwords, its influence can also be seen in somewhat greater number of verbatim Latin phrases in Polish literature (especially from the 19th century and earlier), than, say, in English.

In the 18th century, with rising prominence of France in Europe, French supplanted Latin in this respect. Some French borrowings also date from the Napoleonic era, when the Poles were enthusiastic supporters of Napoleon. Examples include ekran (from French écran, screen), abazur (abat-jour, lamp shade), rekin (requin, shark), meble (meuble, furniture), bagaz (bagage, luggage), walizka (valise, suitcase), fotel (fauteuil, armchair), plaza (plage, beach) and koszmar (cauchemar, nightmare). Some place names have also been adapted from French, such as the two Warsaw boroughs of Zoliborz (joli bord=beautiful riverside) and Mokotów (mon coteau=my hill), as well as the town of Zyrardów (from the name Girard, with the Polish suffix -ów attached to point at owner/founder of a town).

Other words are borrowed from other Slavic languages, for example, sejm, hanba and brama from Czech.

Some words like bachor (an unruly boy or child) and ciuchy (slang for clothing) were borrowed from Yiddish, spoken by the large Polish Jewish population before their numbers were severely depleted during the Holocaust.

Typical loanwords from Italian include pomidor from pomodoro
(tomato), kalafior from cavolfiore (cauliflower), pomarancza from l'arancio (orange), etc. Those were introduced in the times of queen Bona Sforza (the wife of Polish king Sigismund the Old) who was famous for introducing Poland to Italian cuisine, especially vegetables. Another interesting word of Italian origin is autostrada (from Italian "autostrada", highway).

The contacts with Ottoman Turkey in the 17th century brought many new words, some of them still in use, e.g. jar (deep valley), szaszlyk (shish kebab), filizanka (cup), arbuz (water melon), dywan (carpet), kielbasa (sausage) kielbasa. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition. 2000 , etc.

The mountain dialects of the Górale in southern Poland, have quite a number of words borrowed from Hungarian (e.g. baca, gazda, juhas, hejnal) and Romanian from historical contacts with Hungarian-dominated Slovakia and Wallachian herders who travelled north along the Carpathians.

Thieves' slang includes such words as kimac (to sleep) or majcher (knife) of Greek origin, considered then unknown to the outside world.

Direct borrowings from Russian are extremely rare, in spite of long periods of dependence on tzarist Russia and the Soviet Union, and are limited to few internationalisms as sputnik or pieriestrojka .

There are also few words borrowed form Mongolian language, those are dzida (spear) or szereg (a line, column). Those words were brought to Polish language during wars with Genghis Khan's armies.

Chronology


(Notice lower case)

Selected countries


Europe: Europa

Common phrases


* Note that adjectives based on proper nouns (polski, amerykanski, etc) are not capitalized, unlike in English.

See also


Poglish
Slavic languages
Slavic people
Swadesh list of Slavic languages
Holy Cross Sermons

External links


"A Touch of Polish," BBC
1,000 free multi-choice Polish grammar drills online
A Concise Polish Grammar, by Ronald F. Feldstein (110-page 600-KB pdf)
Univ. of Pittsburgh: Polish Language Website
Map of Polish dialects
Oneness City - Polish Lessons with Activities
Polish verb conjugator from Logos Translations
A short English-Polish-Japanese phrase list(renewal) incl. sound file

Dictionaries


Polish bilingual dictionaries
Basic English-Polish Dictionary
Polish Dictionary from Webster's Dictionary
English-Polish-English dictionary DICT
English-Polish-English dictionary from lingvoSoft
English-Polish dictionary with 14,000 words

   
   
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