GHEIII
Fosco is here
-
- Italiano
- English
- International
- Fosco
Attention! We are receiving reports about SCAM attempts, which promise you to get Elcoin for free after submitting your account data on some pages.
We advise you DO NOT TO CLICK on such suspicious links and do not share your account login/password with ANYONE.
Please report any kind of such activity directly to our Support. Thank you!
We advise you DO NOT TO CLICK on such suspicious links and do not share your account login/password with ANYONE.
Please report any kind of such activity directly to our Support. Thank you!
-
-
Polish is said to be the hardest.
Dont know about that , but could be true tho

I really enjoy ger actually i just hate how different it is, hard to understand (lafee is one of my favorite artist)
Maybe because we have for some words like 50 other Words that mean the exact same

What the heck is lafee
-
Sugar.
-
Polish is said to be the hardest.
Dont know about that , but could be true tho

[QUOTE="Forostar, post: 417846, member: 1066"]My wife (and family-in-law) comes from Poland, and to be frank, I haven't really spent lots of time to learn the language. I can't speak it well (at least not full sentences, although I know some) but I can understand some stuff when I hear it. Now I have another excuse, besides my laziness:
http://claritaslux.com/blog/polish-hardest-language-learn/
[SIZE=5]Polish – the hardest language to learn in the world[/SIZE]
What is the hardest language to learn for English Speakers? Take a guess; it is not Chinese or Japanese. It is Polish. Polish has seven cases and Polish grammar has more exception than rules. German for example has four cases all which are logical, seem to have no pattern or rules; you have to learn the entire language. Asia languages usually do not have cases, or at least like that.- - - -> More in link!
http://claritaslux.com/blog/the-hardest-language-to-learn/
What is the hardest language to learn?- Extremely Hard: The hardest language to learn is: Polish – Seven Cases, Seven Genders and very difficult pronunciation. Average English speaker is fluent at about the age 12; the average Polish speaker is fluent in their language after age 16. .
- Very Hard: Finnish, Hungarian, and Estonian – These languages are hard because of the countless noun cases. However, the cases are more like English prepositions added to the end of the root.Pretty Hard: Ukrainian and Russian complex grammar and different alphabet but easier pronunciation. Serbian-Also similar to other Slavic languages with a complex case and gender system, but it also has many tenses.
- Simply Arduous: Ukrainian and Russian – Second language learners wrongly assume because these languages use a different script (Cyrillic) that it out ranks Polish. This is not objective, as an alphabet is only lets say 26 letters. It is really the pronunciation and how societies use the language that influences ranking.
- Challenging contender jockey for position: Arabic - Three baby cases which are like a walk in the park compared to the above, but the unusual pronunciation and flow of the language makes study laborious and requires cognitive diligence if you want to speak it.
- Fairly Hard: Chinese and Japanese - No cases, no genders, no tenses, no verb changes, short words, very easy grammar, however, writing is hard. But to speak it is very easy. Also intonations make it harder but certainly not harder than Polish pronunciation. I know a Chinese language teacher that says people pick up Chinese very easy, but he speaks several languages and could not learn Polish. I am learning some Chinese, it is not the hardest language maybe even the easiest language to learn. Not the hardest language by any measure. Try to learn some Chinese and Polish your self and you will see which is the hardest language.
- Average: French - lots of tenses but not used and moderate grammar. German-only four cases and like five exceptions, everything is logical, of course.
- Easy: Spanish and Italian - People I know pick these up no problem, even accountants and technical people rather than humanistic language people.
- Basic to hard: English, no cases or gender, you hear it everywhere, spelling can be hard and British tenses you can use the simple and continues tense instead of the perfect tenses and you will speak American English. English at the basic level is easy but to speak it like a native it’s hard because of the dynamic idiomatic nature.
----> More in link!These articles don't sound very scientific (quite subjective!) but I find some of the points of view and comparisons pretty interesting. And there are indeed many exceptions in Poland grammar.
I disagree with some notions, e.g.:
In contrast Slavic countries are good people but there is not a lot of boisterous openness. If you try to speak their language they will switch to English. It is just the culture or laugh and switch to English.I have never experienced this. In my country it's way worse: they switch to English as soon as they sense when you're foreign.[/QUOTE]
-
POLSHKA AEFECT
-
Chissà che brutta sensazione non riuscire ad ordinare una vodka. :v
-
YO UORDINUO UONA BODKA.
-
Quoto.
-
I certi posti fai prima a distillartela da solo.
-
Il problema è che mi mancano i bicchieri. ;-;
-
E BECCERI TE MANCANO.
Voglio distillato di bambù.
-
Per me succo di mandragola fresco, grazie.
-
I bambù non li distilla nessuno.
E non servono i bicchieri, se si hanno scarpe in cui bere.
Ricordatevi di invadere le parti straniere, facciamoci riconoscere. u.ù
-
Ma io non ho scarpe da donna in armadio. :c
-
Quelle da uomo sono perfette.
-
Invadere la sezione polacca è un flashback da report.
-
E se portassi solo dei sandali?
-
Io con il sandalo faccio come minimo l'incenso.
-
Io con il sandalo faccio come minimo l'incenso.
Ti faccio diventare un orso bruno a calci.

-
I sandali sono ottimi per tracannare grandi quantità di liquidi, essendo più aperti.