Polish language
| Spoken in: | Poland Australia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Canada, Czech Republic, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Hungary, Israel, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Russia (Europe), Slovakia, Ukraine, UAE, USA. |
| Total speakers: | 43 Million |
| Ranking: | 24 |
| Genetic classification: |
Indo-European Slavic West Lekhitic Polish |
| Official status | |
|---|---|
| Official language of: | Poland |
| ISO 639-1: | pl |
| ISO 639-2: | pol |
| SIL: | PQL |
| Table of contents |
|
2 Classification 3 Geographic distribution 4 Dialects 5 Sounds 6 Grammar 7 Vocabulary 8 Writing systems |
History
Polish has been influenced by contact with foreign languages. In Greater Poland and especially Silesia the inimitable regional patois contains a mixture of Polish and German elements. Since 1945, as the result of mass education and mass migrations, standard Polish has become far more homogeneous, although regional dialects persist. In the western and northern territories, resettled in large measure by Poles from the Soviet Union, the older generation came to speak a language characteristic of the former eastern provinces.
Classification
The Polish language (together with Upper and Lower Sorbian, and other Lekhitic languages) as well as Czech-Slovak, belongs to the West Slavic branch of Slavic languages.
Geographic distribution
Polish is mainly spoken in Poland, but Polish emigrants have brought the language with them, and there are significant numbers of Polish speakers in Australia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Canada, Czech Republic, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Hungary, Israel, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Russia (Europe), Slovakia, Ukraine, UAE, and the USA.
Dialects
It has several dialects that correspond in the main to the old tribal divisions; the most significant of these (in terms of numbers of speakers) are Great Polish (spoken in the northwest), Little Polish (spoken in the southeast), Mazovian, and Silesian. Mazovian shares some features with Kashubian, whose remaining speakers (estimates vary from 100,000 to over 200,000) live west of Gdansk near the Baltic Sea.
Small numbers of people also speak Belarusian, Ukrainian, and German as well as several varieties of Romany.
Nouns, adjectives and verbs are declined, and noun declension is highly irregular. Every verb is either perfect or imperfect.
Verbs often come in pairs, one of them imperfect and the other perfect (usually imperfect verb with a prefix), but often there are many perfect verbs with different prefixes for single imperfect words.
Tenses are:
Sounds
to do: sounds and phonology of PolishGrammar
Polish is often said to be one of the most difficult languages for non-native speakers to learn. It has a complex gender system with four genders: neuter, feminine and two masculine genders (animate and inanimate). There are 7 cases and 2 numbers.
| construction | (for perfect verbs) | (for imperfect verbs) | example imperfect | example perfect |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| verb+ić | infinitive | infinitive | robić | zrobić |
| verb+suffix | future simple tense | present tense | robicie | zrobicie |
| past participle+suffix | past perfect tense | past imperfect tense | robiliście | zrobiliście |
| (this suffix can be moved) | coście robili | coście zrobili | ||
Movable suffix is usually attached to verb or to the most accented of sentence, like question preposition.
Sometimes alone suffix with prefix że- appears.
So what have you done ? can be:
- co zrobiliście
- coście zrobili
- co żeście zrobili
- co wy zrobiliście
- coście zrobili (in fact, a Polish won't use subject here)
- co żeście zrobili (as above)
- co wyście zrobili (here the stress goes to "you" -- "wy"+ście)
- zrobił (he made/did)
- zrobiła (she made/did)
- zrobiło (it made/did)
Vocabulary
to do: Polish vocabulary
Writing systems
The Polish alphabet ... letters are variously decorated with accents and it can be represented with the ISO 8859-2 character set:
a, ą, b, c, ć, d, e, ę, f, g, h, i, j, k, l, ł, m, n, ń, o, ó, p, q, r, s, ś, t, u, v, w, x, y, z, ź, ż,
A, Ą, B, C, Ć, D, E, Ę, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, Ł, M, N, Ń, O, Ó, P, Q, R, S, Ś, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z, Ź, Ż
The letters q, v and x are used only in foreign words.
See also: