Jeżeli jeszcze nie słyszeliście, to przypominamy, że w 1-ego listopada rusza 30-dniowe wyzwanie Easy Polish na naszym serwerze na Discordzie. 🤖 Serdecznie zapraszamy Was do wspólnej nauki przez cały miesiąc 🧡 Tutaj wszystkie szczegóły: th-cam.com/video/kSLHwzrc5q4/w-d-xo.html *** If you haven't heard yet: on 1st November, we're starting a 30-day challenge with Easy Polish on our Discord server 🤖 You're welcome to join us and take a month to boost your Polish skills 🧡 Here you can find all the details: th-cam.com/video/kSLHwzrc5q4/w-d-xo.html
If you want to practice your writing and reading in Polish, check out our 30-day challenge, that might be something just for you: www.easypolish.org/30day-challenge :D
0:23 what do you mean when you say accusative is "the fourth case"? I've heard various people refer to the cases having an order, but can't find any explanation of this.
the whole thing with ę is actually not so simple. It seems depending on the region some do pronounce it as a nasal and some don't. Also it seems that in many cases people will pronounce it as a nasal everywhere in poland in spontaneous cases. Not only that but some of the people you have working for you in the video do in fact pronounce the ę in all cases. On the other hand I have encountered people will apparently no longer even notice that existence of ę and always write e, which leads to rather funny consequences on when using an online translator, as it translate it as he instead of I. So it is important to be aware of this shifting situation in Polish
Fraza "mam święty spokój" w języku polskim oznacza, że ktoś czuje się całkowicie spokojny lub nie ma żadnych zmartwień, często po rozwiązaniu jakiegoś problemu lub pozbyciu się czegoś niechcianego.
Just some friendly feedback from an American who speaks only English but is learning Polish. I would love to learn from your videos but I have a hard time following their rapid pace. Not only do I have to read very small text to understand what is being said, it is very fast and I don’t have any time to really grasp what you’re talking about. Things like “accusative” or foreign concepts to us as we do not have such things. So even though I watched the whole video I didn’t learn anything and wind up very frustrated. This is why people like me turn to duo lingo where we can have things broken down into very small pieces at a slower pace. Please consider this when teaching Polish to English speaking students. It would help if you spoke like you are teaching a small child.
That's what the Super Easy Polish videos are for. These videos are designed for intermediate or more advanced Polish speakers. Also, I don't think these videos are meant to be a comprehensive curriculum. Perhaps you could provide feedback as to what topics you would like them to cover, rather than just say they're doing it wrong. And I suspect how they teach their online (beginner) classes is different from how they speak in their videos. You can always look up things like grammatical cases on Wikipedia or elsewhere. BTW, accusative case is for direct objects.
Hey Elyzak! I'm sorry to hear about your struggles. We know there are different types of students - some love to have all the grammar broken down, and this is video was made with them in mind. But we understand that there's also people who need to skip the grammar part, and just get some slowly spoken phrases they can learn by heart, so we're trying to make different types of videos as well. If you're the second type, these videos might be more to your liking: th-cam.com/video/VOYiVxGRqJU/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/epUzqslCMgY/w-d-xo.html And we've been just working on some more "slow Polish" videos. They'll be coming up in the next weeks, so there will be a break with grammar topics for a bit ;) If you have any specific suggestions of topics you'd like us to cover in the future - as someone already pointed out, listing them would be really helpful!
@@jc3drums916 I never said they were doing it wrong. I had no idea they had super easy polish. I gave them feedback about why this wasn’t helpful for me and is turning me away.
@@EasyPolish it’s not that I don’t want the grammar. I absolutely DO want to learn the grammar and reasoning. I’m just saying it is difficult to follow due to the speed at which people are speaking and that some of the grammar is unfamiliar to English speakers because we do not have “accusative” in our language so we need this explained. And I can’t understand because you’re speaking so fast and I have to read in English.
Jeżeli jeszcze nie słyszeliście, to przypominamy, że w 1-ego listopada rusza 30-dniowe wyzwanie Easy Polish na naszym serwerze na Discordzie. 🤖 Serdecznie zapraszamy Was do wspólnej nauki przez cały miesiąc 🧡 Tutaj wszystkie szczegóły: th-cam.com/video/kSLHwzrc5q4/w-d-xo.html
***
If you haven't heard yet: on 1st November, we're starting a 30-day challenge with Easy Polish on our Discord server 🤖 You're welcome to join us and take a month to boost your Polish skills 🧡 Here you can find all the details: th-cam.com/video/kSLHwzrc5q4/w-d-xo.html
Good content. I can speak Polish but can't write or read so this is gonna be helpful for me.
If you want to practice your writing and reading in Polish, check out our 30-day challenge, that might be something just for you: www.easypolish.org/30day-challenge :D
It was funny useful and interesting, thank you! ❤️☺️
jestecie najlipszy
0:23 what do you mean when you say accusative is "the fourth case"? I've heard various people refer to the cases having an order, but can't find any explanation of this.
Super odcinek. Potraficie sprawić, że nawet najtrudniejsze aspekty języka polskiego staną się zabawą.
the whole thing with ę is actually not so simple. It seems depending on the region some do pronounce it as a nasal and some don't. Also it seems that in many cases people will pronounce it as a nasal everywhere in poland in spontaneous cases. Not only that but some of the people you have working for you in the video do in fact pronounce the ę in all cases.
On the other hand I have encountered people will apparently no longer even notice that existence of ę and always write e, which leads to rather funny consequences on when using an online translator, as it translate it as he instead of I.
So it is important to be aware of this shifting situation in Polish
are plants classed as living or does it have to be breathing ?
Hey guys, could we get a Locative case video next?
Yes, that would make sense. It's one of the last ones on our list, so we'll be getting to it soon 🙌
Tysiąc serc właśnie pękło po odkryciu idealnego dżentelmana Alexa.💔😄
There's a typo, no? 67 instead of 57
Ah, you're right! Thank you 🙌
A co znaczy "mam święty spokój"?
Fraza "mam święty spokój" w języku polskim oznacza, że ktoś czuje się całkowicie spokojny lub nie ma żadnych zmartwień, często po rozwiązaniu jakiegoś problemu lub pozbyciu się czegoś niechcianego.
@@iryna4898 W końcu zrozumiałem, dziękuję!
Just some friendly feedback from an American who speaks only English but is learning Polish. I would love to learn from your videos but I have a hard time following their rapid pace. Not only do I have to read very small text to understand what is being said, it is very fast and I don’t have any time to really grasp what you’re talking about. Things like “accusative” or foreign concepts to us as we do not have such things. So even though I watched the whole video I didn’t learn anything and wind up very frustrated. This is why people like me turn to duo lingo where we can have things broken down into very small pieces at a slower pace. Please consider this when teaching Polish to English speaking students. It would help if you spoke like you are teaching a small child.
That's what the Super Easy Polish videos are for. These videos are designed for intermediate or more advanced Polish speakers. Also, I don't think these videos are meant to be a comprehensive curriculum. Perhaps you could provide feedback as to what topics you would like them to cover, rather than just say they're doing it wrong. And I suspect how they teach their online (beginner) classes is different from how they speak in their videos. You can always look up things like grammatical cases on Wikipedia or elsewhere.
BTW, accusative case is for direct objects.
Check out their super easy polish videos. These here are for advanced learners. Also, they have classes you can book.
Hey Elyzak! I'm sorry to hear about your struggles. We know there are different types of students - some love to have all the grammar broken down, and this is video was made with them in mind. But we understand that there's also people who need to skip the grammar part, and just get some slowly spoken phrases they can learn by heart, so we're trying to make different types of videos as well.
If you're the second type, these videos might be more to your liking:
th-cam.com/video/VOYiVxGRqJU/w-d-xo.html
th-cam.com/video/epUzqslCMgY/w-d-xo.html
And we've been just working on some more "slow Polish" videos. They'll be coming up in the next weeks, so there will be a break with grammar topics for a bit ;)
If you have any specific suggestions of topics you'd like us to cover in the future - as someone already pointed out, listing them would be really helpful!
@@jc3drums916 I never said they were doing it wrong. I had no idea they had super easy polish. I gave them feedback about why this wasn’t helpful for me and is turning me away.
@@EasyPolish it’s not that I don’t want the grammar. I absolutely DO want to learn the grammar and reasoning. I’m just saying it is difficult to follow due to the speed at which people are speaking and that some of the grammar is unfamiliar to English speakers because we do not have “accusative” in our language so we need this explained. And I can’t understand because you’re speaking so fast and I have to read in English.