Added: 2 years ago
From: AyeAyeKapitanie
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  • You wrote "ę at the end of a word loses its nasality", but then you pronounce "idę" and "uczę się" nasally... I'm confused :0

  • brilliant!! thank you very much!

  • I'm learning Polish and find it difficult to distinguish and hear the difference between all of the "zh," "sh," and "ch" sounds as in z, z(with dot), z(with accent mark), etc. Your pronunciation was very clear! Thank you!

  • my my let get bck to J biever XD

  • I'm half pollack and proud :D

  • @AyeAyeKapitanie of course. But I meant the sounds aren't the same. I find the french 'j' more similar to the polish 'ź'. But then again, I suppose there is no equivalent to ż in a non-slavic language. So never mind :)

  • ż does not remind bonjour :O

  • @milczypiotr I meant, the 'j' in bonjour, obviously :)

  • KURWA!

  • @M4ulandi Kurwa is out of fasion, now we use kurvix 

  • Great lesson, thank you a lot!

    Btw, do you speak all the languages that you used for the analogies in your lesson?

  • Some sounds are similar to Chinese. "rz" is like Chinese "r". dz(dot) is like Chinese "zh".

  • @criskity Oh wow, that was a surprising thing to hear! I don't speak any Chinese, so I'll just trust your words:)

  • @criskity Sweet! I speak Chinese =D!

  • WOW a lot of these words are similar to Serbian.

  • Quiero aprender, pero es bastante difícil :( Igual, muchas gracias. Thank you so much.

  • @elenadarkness4 De nada, sé que el polaco es difícil. Igual... ¡buena suerte! :)

  • @elenadarkness4 !espanol es mas y mas popular!

  • Wiesz.. Dowiedziałem się czegoś nowego, haha :D

  • Ahhhh dzięki <3

  • thank you for the video! very good

    It's funny that there are so many "shhhs" on it. Seems like you're joking.

  • dziękuję bardzo!

  • Languages of the world. They're near amazing :)

  • Dziękujemy! Jeden z najlepszych klipów języka polskiego.

  • Most frequent used Polish sentences:

    Wypierdalaj chuju - Have a nice day

    Ty pedale - You are nice guy

    Pierdolona szmato! - You look so beautifull today

    Wal się na ryj - see you tommorow

  • jot klingt wie auf Deutsch... 

  • @HerrSpieldose Ja, das stimmt - das ist ganz einfach derselbe Laut. :)

  • i like polish ppl and tried to learn some polish but i have diifficulty pronoucing somr words ...

    thnk u for the video

  • Tak na marginesie, to "igrek" zamiast "y" :P

  • I'm more confused than ever before.

  • aaah bellissimo. This is the best pronunciation guide I ever seen :-D

    Keep up the good work :-)

  • I just wonder, do you Polish people struggle to learn English? Is English easy or hard to learn from a Polish perspective?

  • For me its very dificult

  • For me its very dificult its a straggle

  • @Feisty1967  From Polish perspective english is the easiest foreign language;p i tried to learn also german and french (these 3 languages are in schools) and i'm sure that English is the best;] grammar isn't so hard and the most difficult thing for polish learners is a lot of tenses while in polish are only 3;] but english is the most popular language here and our generagtion will be completely able to commucate in english soon;] Have fun and sorry for any mistakes;p

  • @kris7zgora In some ways I think that Polish is more logical. Once you learn the verbs, you can apply the rules to any other verbs. English does not always follow the rules of grammar, there are lots of irregulaties, look at some of our past tenses, and 3 different There's. There, as in over there, their as in belonging to them and they're as in they are. Must be confusing for foreigners.

  • @Feisty1967 Maybe the main advantage is that English is everywhere and we can learn it even without spending hours reading grammar books;p to be honest I've never wondered about regularities and irregularities in Polish but I must check it;]

  • @Feisty1967 I think that English compared to other languages I've ever learned is the easiest language. In Polish You must use a lot forms of verbs and nouns plus different forms of adjectives to feminine and masculine, so for foreigner this may be troublesome. (I heard that foreigners hates "przypadki" and they think it's absolutely useless xD ) On the one hand in English You don't use many forms of part of speech and on the other hand in English You must remember a lot of tenses.

  • @Feisty1967 Also pronunaciation for English sound may be different in different words. In Polish one sound has his own, permanent pronunaciation. I think that it's much more easier to learn English because in daily life You are meeting a lot of English words. Now English is everywhere so people are learning English unwittingly. I hope that my answer was helpful for You and I'm sorry for any mistakes.

  • thanks for this it's really helping me!!

  • Geezzz!! Polish must be the hardest language on Hearth!!!

  • Good stuff. =)

  • Tusen tusen takk for at du lastet opp dette, hjalp meg masse! :D

    Dziękuję bardzo ^^

  • I love this!

  • almost five years trying to know the difference between "ś" and "sz", and I learned it in five minutes.

    dziękuję bardzo!

  • @matvey21krlmtv Oh, it's so nice to hear that! :) You're welcome anytime.

  • Thank you for these videos I'm so grateful because they are very well explained and organized. Thank you very much again and congratulations.

    Dziękuję za te filmy! Jestem bardzo wdzięczny, ponieważ są one bardzo dobrze wyjaśnione i zorganizowane. Dziękuję bardzo jeszcze raz i gratulacje. Jesteś doskonałym nauczycielem, dzięki!

    (Mam przetłumaczone z google tłumacz, bo jestem hiszpańskim i Właśnie zacząłem uczyć się polskiego, więc nie wiem czy to będzie dobrze przetłumaczone;)

  • Thank you very much!!

  • you are a very good teacher! :D

  • @DJcarinaa Thank you! :)

  • Very clear and useful - thank you!

  • @lsur04 You're welcome :)

  • Nie yy tylko igrek xD

  • Wow, this really teaches me to prounce my last name the right way..

    (it's -Krzyżaniak)

    people have said it in so many different ways its been driving me crazy!

    All my life I've been saying that the second ż is silent.

    Is that true in this case?

  • @michio Unfortunately, it's not :) "Ż" is never silent. You have to pronunce all the letters in your surname, remembering that "rz" and "ż" is the same sound ^^ If you're still not sure how it should be pronunced, I can send you a voice clip or something ^^

  • @AyeAyeKapitanie Oh, that would be wonderful!! I'm still working on trying to pronounce it without sounding too american-ish. In my birth certificate they're spelled with two "z'' but I'm sure that the second "z" is traditionally "ż"

  • @michio You're right, Krzyżaniak sounds very ordinary and natural as a Polish surname, while "Krzyzzaniak" wouldn't really make too much sense ;)

    That's not a problem really, the only thing I need is your email, please send it to me in a private message. ^^

  • If you are Finnish, I can teach you Polish via Skype. In return, you can teach me Finnish :)

  • Czekaj, czekaj... To chyba nie była propozycja skierowana do mnie? :)

  • Nie no, na wypadek, gdyby jakiś Fin tu wskoczył ;) No chyba, że znasz fiński... to mogę Cię w zamian z polskiego podszkolić ;) Pozdrawiam!

  • Aha, już rozumiem, myślałam, że to była propozycja do konkretnej osoby ^^ Niestety, mój zasod słownictwa fińskiego ogranicza się do jakichś 10 zwrotów xD

  • czytając alfabet mówi sie IGREK nie jakieś Y, Please note everyone that the letter Y i pronounced badly here,

  • Wiem, co masz na myśli, ale igrek jest samogłoską i, jeśli mowa o wymowie (!), a o tym jest to video, to wymawia się jako samogłoskę y. Nazwa litery to igrek, ale to chyba nie wyjaśnia wymowy, prawda? The y-sound is just as shown in the video. The name of the letter is igrek but it doesn't really have anything to do with the pronunciation.

  • I'm polish, I can help everybody who has problems with polish and needs help :D

  • Thanks!

  • Thanks!

  • Thanks for the video.

  • You're welcome ^^

  • THANK YOU!  Comprehensive instructive and user friendly lesson. Glad you took the time.

  • good tutorial.

  • Jag gillar uttalet på det andra a:et ^^ 'aww' xD

  • I also think it's cute ^^

  • good for you ^^

  • Herre min skapare, det där uttalas ju precis som på ryska ;O hjälp!

  • Russian is the mother of all Slavic languages, you can probably say ;)

  • Haha should I have said that like half a year ago, you would both eat and kill me ^^

  • Comment removed

  • @AyeAyeKapitanie

    ska taki pomysl?to, ze Rosja jest najwieksza wcale nie oznacza, że najstarsza...myślę, że języki ukształtowały się mniej wiecej w tym, samym czasie ale jeśli trzeba byłoby dokonać wyboru powiedziałabym, że polski był pierwszy z wielu historycznych powodów

  • @AyeAyeKapitanie

    Slavic language was first after born west and east slavic languages .

  • Vi svenskar har bara 28, så FY SKÄMS! Ola! Du säger att svenska är knepigt ^^ Polska är ju helt gaaaaalet ;-)

  • Ja men jag vet du gillar oss i alla fall ;D

  • haha inte oss, men dej ^^ Bra svensk gramatik förresten =D

  • spoko lekcja sprzyda się tylko anglicy nie zaglądaja ;d

  • jedna z pierwszych sensownych lekcji polskiej wymowy jaką widziałam na youtube. Brawo!

  • Ojej, dziękuję :) Miałam jeszcze ambitniejszy plan z transkrypcją fonetyczną IPA, ale niestety YouTube nie odczytuje tych znaków ;) Mimo wszystko śliczne dzięki za przemiły komplement!

  • dobra robota z tą instrukcją ;) Zabawnie jest psłuchać o polskiej wymowie z perspektywy obcokrajowca :) Serio, dobre wskazówki !

  • Dzięki!

    Wprawdzie najlepszym sposobem na naukę i tak pozostaje pobyt w Polsce, ale video to zawsze coś :)

  • Tusen takk:D

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