Polish Ukrainian Mutually Intelligible? | Animals | Slavic Languages Comparison

Are Polish and Ukrainian mutually intelligible? 🇵🇱💬🇺🇦 In this week's Slavic languages comparison, we talk about animals in Polish and Ukrainian. My guest from Ukraine will have to guess 6 animals that I’ll describe to her in Polish. She doesn’t speak any Polish so it’s going to be an interesting challenge.
At the end of our Polish Ukrainian conversation, a mythical creature paid us a visit. Watch till the end to find out more about it.
What do you think? Is Polish similar to the Ukrainian language? 🤔
Support my Work:
☕️Buy me a Coffee → www.paypal.me/ecolinguist (I appreciate every donation no matter how big or small🤠)
🤓🇵🇱👨‍🏫 Book a Polish Lesson with me → ecolinguist.com/ (try out the Ecolinguist learning experience)
Time stamps:
0:00 - Introduction
2:13 - 1. Animal
4:23 - 2. Animal
7:43 - 3. Animal
10:44 - 4. Animal
13:39 - 5. Animal
17:30 - 6. Animal
📽Recommended Videos:
🤓Carpatho Rusyn Language | Can Ukrainian speakers understand? • Carpatho Rusyn Languag...
🇵🇱💬🇺🇦 Polish Ukrainian Conversation → • Polish Ukrainian Mutua...
🇵🇱💬🇷🇺 Polish Russian Conversation → • Polish Russian Compari...
🤠💬🤠 Slavic Languages Comparison → • Slavic Languages Compa...
🤓💬🇵🇱 Polish Lessons → • 🤓💬🇵🇱 Polish Lessons fo...
-----------------
Clip used and references:
Cornelius sigh - "Planet of the Apes" (1968) - dir. Franklin J. Schaffner

Пікірлер: 7 300

  • @Ecolinguist
    @Ecolinguist4 жыл бұрын

    Polish Czech Conversation 🇵🇱💬🇨🇿→ kzread.info/dash/bejne/rIqVtsuvp7yfkpc.html 😎 🤓You can navigate the Polish Ukrainian video with the following TIME STAMPS: 1. Animal - 2:13 2. Animal - 4:23 3. Animal - 7:43 4. Animal - 10:44 5. Animal - 13:39 6. Animal - 17:30

  • @gancarzpl

    @gancarzpl

    4 жыл бұрын

    In this caparison did you take in account 200 years of extremely brutal and intense russyfication of Ukraine ?

  • @Ecolinguist

    @Ecolinguist

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@gancarzpl We have no way of affecting the past. Let's focus on where we are now and build bridges wherever we can.

  • @MrArmogun

    @MrArmogun

    4 жыл бұрын

    1. В українській мові немає відмінювання жіночому роду тварин. Правильно казати - самиця слона. Правильніше - слониця, свині - льоха, собаки - сука 2. Вершки - це калька з російської. Правильно - сметана. 3. В українській немає імені "Женя ", - це суржик 4. В українській також поширено казати - пес 5. Маслянка - продукт відходів збитої сметани в масло

  • @alexhusiev8973

    @alexhusiev8973

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@MrArmogun 1. Схоже на те, слониха напевне теж калька. 2. Але ж вершки це "сливки", де тут калька? 3. То як правильно звертатися до Жень? Рос. Женя це теж калька з фр. Eugénie/Eugène.

  • @qewrtyxcb

    @qewrtyxcb

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@MrArmogun Западенец, это у тебя в горах так принято говорить, на востоке про то что ты написал даже не слышали. И не говори мне что твой гуцульский украинский язык самый правильный))

  • @forgiveness_denied
    @forgiveness_denied4 жыл бұрын

    за свої стосунки не переживав так, як за те шоб вони один одного зрозуміли!🙏🏻😨😂😂😂

  • @WestDonbass

    @WestDonbass

    4 жыл бұрын

    Так!)))

  • @Mivasuk

    @Mivasuk

    4 жыл бұрын

    Сміюся :)

  • @Mivasuk

    @Mivasuk

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@notanenglishperson9865 Сміюся радісним і добрим сміхом бо почувався як і forgiveness denied :) І з стосунками в мене все ок. Наскільки то може бути "ок" взагалі зі стосунками. ;)

  • @valeriathiscovska2456

    @valeriathiscovska2456

    4 жыл бұрын

    Я теж😂😂😂

  • @h1n1worm

    @h1n1worm

    4 жыл бұрын

    про сметану я вже волав!! хіба вона не чула про "сметанковий сир" :)

  • @Kilsakala
    @Kilsakala4 жыл бұрын

    Danish guy watching. Tak means thank you in Danish, so the video seemed very polite hahaha

  • @bohemiangreenearth

    @bohemiangreenearth

    3 жыл бұрын

    "Tak" means "yes" and also "so", depend of situation.

  • @newperson1196

    @newperson1196

    3 жыл бұрын

    It’s very interesting! How to say “thanks” in Danish

  • @Sierpina_WMG

    @Sierpina_WMG

    2 жыл бұрын

    skal

  • @mkh_star3684

    @mkh_star3684

    2 жыл бұрын

    In Swedish the same

  • @bbfriendz1313

    @bbfriendz1313

    2 жыл бұрын

    TAK means NO/NOT in Indonesia, from the the word TIDAK, but can be shorten and just say TAK.

  • @aleta5024
    @aleta50242 жыл бұрын

    It's amazing how many words are so similar or the same. I'm Bosnian and I can understand almost everything.

  • @King-fw8or

    @King-fw8or

    2 жыл бұрын

    Це дуже круто;)

  • @mikolajtrzeciecki1188

    @mikolajtrzeciecki1188

    2 жыл бұрын

    We are "slowianie", we have "slowo" - the same words. The others, they are for example "Niemcy" - "the mute ones", they cannot talk to us.

  • @bndera6843

    @bndera6843

    2 жыл бұрын

    But russish don't understand Ukrainian, Polska. Because russish is not Slaviani.

  • @aleta5024

    @aleta5024

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@bndera6843 wtf Russian is a Slavic language. Guess how we say "Good Afternoon" - DOBAR DAN - reminds you of another language?

  • @folkishappalachian6827

    @folkishappalachian6827

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@mikolajtrzeciecki1188 germanic guy here, niemcy is a fair description for us. I struggle in learning polish and slavic languages

  • @mallvalim
    @mallvalim9 ай бұрын

    I'm Ukrainian, and I know Polish, so I can't participate in this little experiment. However, I can tell that the languages are mutually understandable because I remember my mum who doesn't speek any Polish having a full half hour conversation with the first Polish person she'd ever met in her life. That man helped us a lot when we were refugees in Poland by driving us to a train station. Dziękuję bardzo

  • @hooxi5689

    @hooxi5689

    8 ай бұрын

    @user-pn8vk8re3nочень зря язык ничего не сделал плохого

  • @TheStuslo

    @TheStuslo

    8 ай бұрын

    @@hooxi5689від росії найбільше постраждали російськомовні, тому краще забути російську, щоб одного дня тебе не прийшли рятувати з танками.

  • @hooxi5689

    @hooxi5689

    8 ай бұрын

    @@TheStuslo а на человеческом можно писать, а то нихуя не пон,то что высрал

  • @Leshamir
    @Leshamir4 жыл бұрын

    В любой непонятной ситуации: ага добже то цикаво😂😂😂😂

  • @kaiser_ua

    @kaiser_ua

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@PhantomPoland yes. He is my God.

  • @rembo96

    @rembo96

    4 жыл бұрын

    Но то цекаво.

  • @Askhat08

    @Askhat08

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@kaiser_ua Bardzo chekave :DDD

  • @vatavatnaya9182

    @vatavatnaya9182

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@PhantomPoland мы ботов не заказывали ;)

  • @vladzioadenauer943

    @vladzioadenauer943

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@PhantomPoland why do you ask so provocative questions, my friend?) Even if people like some of Bandera's ideas, most of them will never appreciate violence against other nations, especially Polish. There's no reason for Ukrainians to hate y'all or your country. And all of the crimes should be judged, same as good decision should be honored. Love and peace.

  • @user-ez6qg8hg3k
    @user-ez6qg8hg3k4 жыл бұрын

    You know that the language is very similar when they can talk about Greek mythology together

  • @sebastiangudino9377

    @sebastiangudino9377

    2 жыл бұрын

    Complex vocabulary tends to be more similar between sister languages than basic vocabulary like animals! It kind of makes sense, complex vocabulary tends to be standarized by books and stuff, and usually come from a high prestige language like Church Slavonic in case of the slaiv languages, but also Greek and Latin. While words like the names of animals is usually really different because they are rarely prevented from evolving trough time. The might still have the same origin, but hardly be inteligible

  • @paulfisker

    @paulfisker

    2 жыл бұрын

    Haha good point

  • @allegoryofdissonance

    @allegoryofdissonance

    2 жыл бұрын

    I thought that was hella cool too. These two are very cultured.

  • @mattiamele3015

    @mattiamele3015

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@sebastiangudino9377 But the animal names in this video are actually pretty similar except for dog.

  • @sebastiangudino9377

    @sebastiangudino9377

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@mattiamele3015 I would argue that, for being of the same family and having that much geographic proximity. The names are actually pretty different from each other

  • @svitlanaiordatii7022
    @svitlanaiordatii70222 жыл бұрын

    Great video! When people are talking slowly in Polish, I understand a lot (I’m Ukrainian).

  • @philippkater8928
    @philippkater89282 жыл бұрын

    Dzisiaj miałem taka sytuacje ze przyszła kobieta do nas do sklepu (ja mieszkam i urodziłem się w Niemczech) i nie mogła dać sobie radę z zakupami, podeszła do mnie po angielsku ze „help me Please” ja zauważyłem ze trzymała komórkę w rękach z tłumaczem ukraiński na angielski, to ja zacząłem gadać do niej po polsku a nagle się uśmiechnęła i odpowiadała po ukraińsku, mi troszeczkę trudno było jej zrozumieć ale w końcu pomogłem jej i nigdy nie myślałem ze te języki są takie podobne

  • @RadioGhost

    @RadioGhost

    Жыл бұрын

    А звідки вона була?(з якого регіону).Я польску невчив, але те що ви написав я зміг прочитати.

  • @VasylDiakonov

    @VasylDiakonov

    3 ай бұрын

    Дякую за ваше добре серце ❤️

  • @bp9762
    @bp97623 жыл бұрын

    I am Bulgarian and almost never had to look at the English subtitles - either for Polish or for Ukrainian. I am amazed at how well Slavic people of different countries can understand each other.

  • @romansulitsky7735

    @romansulitsky7735

    2 жыл бұрын

    Ну, тогда пишите на болгарском языке. Мы вас поймëм))

  • @Kitulous

    @Kitulous

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@romansulitsky7735 особенно русские болгар, я когда открыл викисловарь какого-то слова, которое было идентично на русском и болгарском (сейчас не вспомню, но было слово типа "приятен" или "прекрасен" или как-то так) и там в синонимах к болгарскому слову 80-90% слов были как в русском языке

  • @RadCommieGamer

    @RadCommieGamer

    2 жыл бұрын

    I am Russian and had almost no problems at all too. I think Bulgarian-Russian conversation could go as smoothly (if not more). Greetings from Moscow, brother Slav.

  • @jonrambos1976

    @jonrambos1976

    2 жыл бұрын

    I was in Bulgaria for vacation and I have to say Bulgarians almost didn't understand anything when I tried to explain things in Polish lol

  • @Kitulous

    @Kitulous

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jonrambos1976 because Polish is very hissing, all these prz sz etc slavic soft r turned into rz (r'eka -> rzeka) how do you think they should have understood you

  • @Lesnyczlowiek99
    @Lesnyczlowiek994 жыл бұрын

    "-Co kogut robi codziennie rano? "-Kukuryku!" To było genialne 😂

  • @Ivan_StandWithUkraine

    @Ivan_StandWithUkraine

    4 жыл бұрын

    Ya tak samo vidpoviv. Hocha pravylno bude "kukarikaje" nu abo jak vona potim skazala "spiwae".

  • @TvorecPzdc

    @TvorecPzdc

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@Ivan_StandWithUkraine а взагалі в нас є слово "піє".

  • @Ivan_StandWithUkraine

    @Ivan_StandWithUkraine

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@TvorecPzdc не знав, дитя кам'яних джунглів 🤷‍♂️ дякую, друже

  • @OneFromLord

    @OneFromLord

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@TvorecPzdc Звідки ти це взяв?

  • @TvorecPzdc

    @TvorecPzdc

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@OneFromLord sum.in.ua/s/pijaty ^^

  • @piotrmajda9269
    @piotrmajda92692 жыл бұрын

    Rozmawiam po polsku i ukraińsku…dla mnie ta rozmowa jest bardzo zabawna :)

  • @SaberLita
    @SaberLita Жыл бұрын

    Це щось!))) дуже потішила та файна розмова))) Люди з Польщі, ви - неймовірні)) я перебуваю в Німеччині, але у тісному контакті з кожним, хто спілкується польською, ви дуже милі і приємні люди ☺️ дякую Вам за все 😘😘😘😘🌹

  • @KasiaB

    @KasiaB

    Жыл бұрын

    Дуже приємно читати такі теплі слова, дякуємо. Дорогі сусіди, ми, поляки всім серцем віримо у вашу перемогу. Україна переможе - не може бути інакше! Всього найкращого Вам і Вашій країні ❤ Serdeczne pozdrowienia z Polski!

  • @feniaraitov1350
    @feniaraitov13504 жыл бұрын

    Я беларуска i я ўсё зразумела што па-польску, што па-украiнску. Вельмi цiкавы кантэнт, дзякуй вам i вiтаньне з Беларусi! I'm Belarusian and I understood everything. Greetings from Belarus, thank you! 🇧🇾

  • @albizarre

    @albizarre

    3 жыл бұрын

    Ваша мова досить зрозуміла для українця. Але є розуміння, що то не російська мова, бо ви (білоруси) білінгви, тобто розмовляєте та розумієте дві мови. Маю сподівання, що і українську теж. Кстати, если будет непонятно, отметьте. Будет интересно, насколько легко понимать беларуске украинца.

  • @garantproduction7247

    @garantproduction7247

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@albizarre понимают они) у меня знакомые с Беларуси понимают отлично меня) вообще классно когда ты понимаешь Русский, Польский, Беларуский, и т.д

  • @muratyakupoglu1041

    @muratyakupoglu1041

    3 жыл бұрын

    Pozdrawiam z Polski Cię

  • @marianjandzierzanowski691

    @marianjandzierzanowski691

    3 жыл бұрын

    Wersja angielska nie jest konieczna Białorusini, Ukraińcy i Polacy rozumieją się tylko na początku jest problem ale po chwili znika. No może jeszcze litery.

  • @PlagueBeer

    @PlagueBeer

    3 жыл бұрын

    Žyvie Biełaruś!

  • @__kawaii
    @__kawaii4 жыл бұрын

    Спустя какое-то время на этом канале я стал понимать 100% сказанного по-польски во всех роликах просто автоматически

  • @8_lucky_853

    @8_lucky_853

    4 жыл бұрын

    теперь ты знаешь ещё один язык

  • @user-od2jb3mx3j

    @user-od2jb3mx3j

    3 жыл бұрын

    Дивлюся з задоволенням! Починаю розуміти польську))) Мови, насправді, дуже подібні. Багато спільнокоріневих слів в наших мовах... Дякую!

  • @Detskie1000

    @Detskie1000

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@spadeofspades6008 буряты турецкий?:)

  • @user-nj9om2iv2t

    @user-nj9om2iv2t

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@user-od2jb3mx3j по привычке читаю символ «i» как английскую i. Дожил, блин.

  • @bshimon7

    @bshimon7

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@user-od2jb3mx3j в украинском языке очень много польских слов,таких,как гатунок,маеток,занадто,и ещё много других слов. Зная украинский,можно понять и словацкий,чешский,польский языки,конечно, написанное,но не разговорную речь:) Русский язык довольно далеко отошёл и знание одного русского,как мне кажется, не достаточно для понимания других славянских языков.

  • @andreasghb8074
    @andreasghb80742 жыл бұрын

    In Spanish "sheep" is oveja, which is really close to Polish and Ukrainian.

  • @walterweiss7124

    @walterweiss7124

    2 жыл бұрын

    nope, in Polish it's owca, but there are some words from latin which might be similar: krypta, cyrk, mauzoleum etc

  • @AdrianBoyko

    @AdrianBoyko

    2 жыл бұрын

    A female sheep in English is “ewe”. The Spanish, Polish, Ukrainian, and English words all derive from proto-Indo-European *owis

  • @andrewshepitko6354

    @andrewshepitko6354

    Жыл бұрын

    @@walterweiss7124 polish has a lot of latin and english words.

  • @qduaty1

    @qduaty1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@andrewshepitko6354 They are not from English. Both Polish and English have Latin words, English has more. It's true however that Russian borrows many English words, including some pronounciation, which is clearly different than the same Latin words in Polish, pronounced like in Latin, or Italian.

  • @francisskundaliny1295

    @francisskundaliny1295

    Жыл бұрын

    @@AdrianBoyko und was ist mir alt-deutsch ?its the same root as english&french& latin&greec

  • @michal5121
    @michal51212 жыл бұрын

    Śliczna dziewczyna. Mam nadzieję, że u niej i jej rodziny dzisiaj wszystko ok. Mam dwoje znajomych z Ukrainy, którzy mają rodziny w Żytomierzu i Kijowie. Przeraża nnie to, co oni muszą przeżywać...

  • @eeyeyy1414

    @eeyeyy1414

    Жыл бұрын

    Привіт з Житомиру

  • @grossmeister1337

    @grossmeister1337

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@eeyeyy1414 Я теж з Житомиру 😅

  • @coolbooy9990

    @coolbooy9990

    8 ай бұрын

    Witam z Kijowie)

  • @pae5284
    @pae52844 жыл бұрын

    Пока смотрел, попутно выяснил, что я ещё и английский понимаю…

  • @Almashina

    @Almashina

    4 жыл бұрын

    оказывается, инглиш - как родной! :-)

  • @victoreleseev9923

    @victoreleseev9923

    4 жыл бұрын

    я тоже понял что больше понимаю английский чем польский

  • @user-mc3fy8dd1o

    @user-mc3fy8dd1o

    4 жыл бұрын

    та же пижня... И вот это все поняли)))

  • @Gromik191

    @Gromik191

    4 жыл бұрын

    Для меня было удобнее понимать английский, чем польский и украинский)

  • @firstbee4484

    @firstbee4484

    4 жыл бұрын

    я выучил английский по этому видео. Работает же!Сейчас в США

  • @eldarikus
    @eldarikus4 жыл бұрын

    English: Cream; Ukrainian: Вершки; Polish: Smietana English: Sour Cream; Ukrainian: Сметана; Polish: Kwasna Smietana

  • @MaxKremenchug

    @MaxKremenchug

    4 жыл бұрын

    Это тот случай, когда в языке есть аналогичное слово и оно мешает понять, что украинские вершки (сливки) - это по польски сметана))) Если бы на фразу вершки поляк сказал тебуретка, то было легче)) Но если бы больше времени потратили бы то поняли, ведь ответ летал в воздухе))) Квашеная сметана - скисшие вершки))) Нужно было дальше сепарировать молоко)))

  • @danielrozmus9179

    @danielrozmus9179

    4 жыл бұрын

    W zasadzie вершки to jest śmietanka albo mleczko do kawy, żadna śmietana.

  • @MaxKremenchug

    @MaxKremenchug

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@danielrozmus9179 Добре, буду знати (як млувять чехи - розумім).

  • @user-jd9gx7mq4g

    @user-jd9gx7mq4g

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@danielrozmus9179 вершки(werszky) - to jest śmietanka Сметана(smetana) - to jest śmietana

  • @discoboy8169

    @discoboy8169

    4 жыл бұрын

    Сream это сливки по-английски. Не думаю что это смиетана по-польски.

  • @tatu_tutu
    @tatu_tutu Жыл бұрын

    I understand the both Ukrainian and Polish, it's very funny to watch 😂 When it comes to any disconnect, it feels like "OMG, no-no-no, not there" 😂 And when you start to understand one another, then "yes, bingo!" 😂

  • @Rachotilko
    @Rachotilko2 жыл бұрын

    Ako Slovák som sa na tom dobre zasmial :) A rozumel som aj jednému aj druhému lepšie, ako ste si vy dvaja rozumeli navzájom.

  • @venixria

    @venixria

    2 жыл бұрын

    Jako Polka ja tez sie usmialam. Strasznie podobne sa Polski i Ukrainski. Slowacki tez jest podobny do Polskiego, bo nawet moglam odczytac to co napisales i w wiekszosci zrozumiec.

  • @natalias50

    @natalias50

    2 жыл бұрын

    Jak kiedys mieszkalam ze Slowaczka to nawet czytalam jej ksiazki 😁

  • @j.vdubois5074

    @j.vdubois5074

    2 жыл бұрын

    Podobne, počúval som to ráno, keď som si robil kávu a žiadne titulky som nepotreboval. Veľmi zábavné a aj zaujímavé ako má Slovenčina prekryv s Poľštinou a aj Ukrainčinou.

  • @Rachotilko

    @Rachotilko

    Жыл бұрын

    @Myk Prot Bratia Ukrajinci, Váš národ mám v srdci. S láskou pozravujem milovanú Ukrajinu

  • @OkeksandrOstrovskyi

    @OkeksandrOstrovskyi

    Жыл бұрын

    @@venixria Я українець. І я легко зрозумів те, що написали ви обоє ;)

  • @krwnik8419
    @krwnik84194 жыл бұрын

    Greetings from Republic of Srpska (Bosnia & Herzegovina) my slavic brother! Мuch love from a Serb. I could understand you both very well! It's unbelievable hahah! You are the best! Keep filming! 🔴🔵⚪⚜ ꒌ 🦅 🇷🇸 🏴‍☠️ СЛАВА!

  • @Ecolinguist

    @Ecolinguist

    4 жыл бұрын

    Thank you Brother! 🤠

  • @MuzykaFilmPolska

    @MuzykaFilmPolska

    4 жыл бұрын

    Bośnia is small Yugoslavia. Multicultural with many nations. Best wishes to you and your country, slavic brother.

  • @dimitarkandev7349

    @dimitarkandev7349

    4 жыл бұрын

    Защо пишете на английски? Славянските езици са нещо уникално! Поздрави от България! Да живеят славянските народи!

  • @MrBruvis

    @MrBruvis

    4 жыл бұрын

    (UA): То пиши на своїй рiднiй мовi, тебе зрозумiють тi, кому це треба:) (RU): Так пиши на своём родном языке, тебя поймут те, кому это надо.

  • @MSM5500

    @MSM5500

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@MrBruvis, вказувати кому якою мовою писати не є гарною справою. Може він саме мені писав, а не вам, адже я не маю жодних упереджень що до його англійської.

  • @yatsykgamer1550
    @yatsykgamer15504 жыл бұрын

    -ти маєш на увазі щось між людиною і твариною? -ага добра то цєкавє!

  • @maxkho00

    @maxkho00

    4 жыл бұрын

    Он не расслышал первую часть, думал, что женщина объясняет, что зверь - это что-то между человеком и животным😂

  • @user-rl3wx3tl9i

    @user-rl3wx3tl9i

    4 жыл бұрын

    )))

  • @catsurrussell1756

    @catsurrussell1756

    4 жыл бұрын

    ...людина теж тварина

  • @roughnegg6615

    @roughnegg6615

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@catsurrussell1756 не зовсім, якщо бути прискіпливішим то людина то є ссавець.

  • @pavlokolobov9123

    @pavlokolobov9123

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@roughnegg6615 чому не зовсім? Ссавці це один із класів хордових, які в свою чергу являються одним із типів в царстві тварин (Інші біологічні класифікації опустимо). Все вірно він написав.

  • @mattc9998
    @mattc99982 жыл бұрын

    That false friend between "cream" and "sour cream" was absolutely fascinating.

  • @walterweiss7124

    @walterweiss7124

    2 жыл бұрын

    even between Germany and Austria there are some differences concerning this word

  • @lenakarlova7664

    @lenakarlova7664

    9 ай бұрын

    @@walterweiss7124 The more weird is sklep - shop in Polish, and a grave house in Ukrainian

  • @andrii6292
    @andrii6292 Жыл бұрын

    В мене був перед війною подібний досвід. Розмовляв з пані з Варшави, коли цієї зими летів на Шрі Ланку. Спочатку ми спілкувались англійською, а потім слово за слово і почали балакати на рідних мовах. Дуже цікаво) 9 годин польоту пролетіло дуже швидко)

  • @user-xb1ge6zf3m
    @user-xb1ge6zf3m4 жыл бұрын

    When u native ukrainian and u understend them both but u never ever learned polish

  • @bartoszjanprzybyszewski1891

    @bartoszjanprzybyszewski1891

    4 жыл бұрын

    True Topaz there is no such thing as native Ukrainian, we are the same nation devided by history. You are more Polish than people in some western polish cities

  • @SergeySedlovsky

    @SergeySedlovsky

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@bartoszjanprzybyszewski1891 There is Ukrainian language, but of course it all comes from Old Slavonic, both Polish and Czech languages are very similar to Ukrainian, as well as Belorussian, although unfortunately, the deal with Belorussia is Russia. Belorussians don't know their own language...

  • @michaelhazan1372

    @michaelhazan1372

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@bartoszjanprzybyszewski1891 it isn't that simple, Ukrainains are East Slavs when Poles are West Slavs, Ukrainain language is more close to Polish/Slovak, than to Russian, but modern Russian language is more like Bulgarian, because of Church Slavonic influence. So it is quite difficult, we aren't the same nation with Poles, most of Ukrainians don't even look like poles, 60% of Ukrainains have brown hair and usually light eyes, but also there are south Ukrainains who has brown hair and brown eyes, there are Carpathian Ukrainains who look even darker. When most of poles have both light hair and light eyes. I talk about it like it is too simple, of course there are more features than eyes and hair, just in general Ukrainains aren't the same with Poles, I respect, support and love Poland, though I'm East Ukrainain, we are really closely related nations, we aren't the same, but believe me Poles are much more brothers than Russians, glory to Polska, Ukraina and friendship)

  • @user-vd1gk1zf8p

    @user-vd1gk1zf8p

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@bartoszjanprzybyszewski1891 Shut up you ideot, Ruthenian, and Rusyn, is Ukrainian Ukrainian is an ancient language derived from Ols East Slavic, older than Russian.

  • @zetbustre

    @zetbustre

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@bartoszjanprzybyszewski1891 There are so much types of Ukrainian language in the West South, East and Middle Ukraine and sometimes people from West Ukraine can't understand people from East but they both can speak Ucrainian just with some difference in speaking and grammar parts. Also in school I had two teachers and from time to time they have been using another words wich have the same meaning. That's because of our history, u know I think so. By the way it's difficult to say that he is more Polish. Good luck maybe that's gonna be interesting for ya

  • @druckiplutnik342
    @druckiplutnik3423 жыл бұрын

    Piękny jest ukraiński język! Pozdrowienia z Polski!

  • @tecnein

    @tecnein

    11 ай бұрын

    Ватай бровер ест славянек. Я не ест славянек, але ло́би́ славянеко́в. Затвориу славянно ряжа даже. Дахав я нади́ се, шта ты все зрозумиу.😊 Vataj brover jest slavánek. Ja né jest slavánek, ale lubý slavánekov. Zatvoriw slavánno ráźa daźe. Dahav ja nadý se, śta ti vsé zrozumiw.😊

  • @coolbooy9990

    @coolbooy9990

    8 ай бұрын

    Польська також гарна мова/polski to też piękny język))

  • @December314
    @December3142 жыл бұрын

    I am Bulgarian. Tried not to read the English subtitles. Both Ukrainian and Polish are difficult for me. Polish a bit more, possibly because of the pronunciation. If I read the Polish subtitles I understand a bit more. I was surprised to discover that at the end of this short video I started getting quite a lot of the conversation. At least to my ear Ukrainian sound much closer to Polish than to Russian. .... Now I am sad, those poor people were forced to speak Russian for generations. I hope they will be able to revive their language, culture and literature.

  • @mariyanichoga1814

    @mariyanichoga1814

    2 жыл бұрын

    I know, that Russian is similar to Bulgarian, because it has common roots. I guess, it's easier for you to understand Russian, than Polish and Ukrainian

  • @user-gz2hd5sn7d

    @user-gz2hd5sn7d

    2 жыл бұрын

    Russia has been trying to destroy us (Ukrainians) and our culture throughout history. Russification has affected eastern Ukraine, so most people in the east speak Russian. (sorry for my English)

  • @MelvilleG

    @MelvilleG

    Жыл бұрын

    As of 2022 I am absolutely positive about this. Russian will be the language of fascism, the language of pariahs for generations to come.

  • @NA-ze1hv

    @NA-ze1hv

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MelvilleG Да? А ты пишешь на английском языке. Напомнить, сколько народов поработили и уничтожили англосаксы и американцы? Ты просто двуличное ничтожество)👾

  • @user-ho2tz6ph5h

    @user-ho2tz6ph5h

    Жыл бұрын

    Что возрождать? Если они помешались с Русскими И поляками, в итоге получился украинский

  • @user-qu6ug9wn8w
    @user-qu6ug9wn8w2 жыл бұрын

    It depends on the region. For example, in the Ternopil region, which was once under Poland, there are still many words from Polish. So, its easy to comunicate. Once a Polish deputy (Robert Nowak z Czestochowa) came to us(Obuhiv, 35 km near Kyiv). I interviewed him as a journalist. He spoke Polish, I spoke Ukrainian. I had no problems making dubbing when edging video). Becouse my grandmom (and mom, respectively) are from Ternopol region, and every summer during childhood I stay there. But the East of Ukraine will no longer understand Polish so well.

  • @logan4863

    @logan4863

    2 жыл бұрын

    Я із Полтавської області, но відсотків на 30-40 розумію польську мову.

  • @user-qu6ug9wn8w

    @user-qu6ug9wn8w

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@logan4863 ну а я, принаймні, вдвічі більше)

  • @user-qu6ug9wn8w

    @user-qu6ug9wn8w

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Grzegorz Wąs дуже счастлива зараз отримати таке повідомлення 💛💙 Від усього серця зичу щастя та добробуту Вам та вашій родині☀️

  • @user-wk4is4bb1z

    @user-wk4is4bb1z

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Grzegorz Wąs я теж літком їздив в село яке на кордоні з Польщею(Мостиські), і завдяки цьому тепер прекрасно розумію польську!

  • @stefanreichenberger5091
    @stefanreichenberger50914 жыл бұрын

    Це було дуже цікаво!

  • @Ecolinguist

    @Ecolinguist

    4 жыл бұрын

    Zgadzam się! 🤠

  • @Kuralimba

    @Kuralimba

    4 жыл бұрын

    Zwłaszcza jak potrafisz zrozumieć i po polsku i po ukraińsku. Pozdrawiam

  • @alexstar7940

    @alexstar7940

    4 жыл бұрын

    Так,я згоден,менi також сподобалось!

  • @gihu688

    @gihu688

    4 жыл бұрын

    Przetłumaczy ktoś

  • @rembo96

    @rembo96

    4 жыл бұрын

    Нет, то было бардзо чекаво.

  • @-_-johndead
    @-_-johndead4 жыл бұрын

    *Дякую за такий цікавий і корисний експеримент* ))

  • @Ecolinguist

    @Ecolinguist

    4 жыл бұрын

    Cieszę się, że ci się podoba :)

  • @MyLegacy

    @MyLegacy

    4 жыл бұрын

    Так, але половину вона так і не зрозуміла))))

  • @user-bs5mr5fk3f

    @user-bs5mr5fk3f

    4 жыл бұрын

    My Legacy Он сказал , что рад , что вам это понравилось He said that he is glad that you liked it )

  • @MyLegacy

    @MyLegacy

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@user-bs5mr5fk3f дякую, це я і так переклав. Я мав на увазі її, а не його

  • @user-pk6bk6nu6s

    @user-pk6bk6nu6s

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@MyLegacy, усе вона зрозуміла. З вовною тільки було трохи важко. Файно усе. Дівчина красуня!

  • @SirkoCycle
    @SirkoCycle Жыл бұрын

    Дякую Польщі за підтримку України в цей важкий час.

  • @jeremydastyn4185

    @jeremydastyn4185

    Жыл бұрын

    Почему сам то не в окопах, украинец?

  • @dunnohow2live997

    @dunnohow2live997

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jeremydastyn4185 а чегой-то ты всех по окопам распределяешь, товарищ?

  • @user-nq2by7kg4m

    @user-nq2by7kg4m

    8 ай бұрын

    @@dunnohow2live997чтобы языком меньше мелели)

  • @Smertkreml0000

    @Smertkreml0000

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@user-nq2by7kg4mа гробы вагнеровцев то в асфальт уже закатывают

  • @LendrickWernicki

    @LendrickWernicki

    6 ай бұрын

    @@jeremydastyn4185А ты сам то где сидишь ветеран диванный

  • @naukumaija7056
    @naukumaija70562 жыл бұрын

    This was so fun to watch. I love the false friend of "cream" soundling like "smetana" tripping you up, and her desperately trying to explain that no you don't put sour cream in coffee 🤣 You can tell the intelligibility is good when you can joke in one language and it makes the other person laugh.

  • @ImVeryOriginal

    @ImVeryOriginal

    2 жыл бұрын

    I think it's not really a false friend, it's just that in Polish the same word is used for both - "śmietana/śmietanka" for cream and "śmietana" for sour cream. :)

  • @przyjaciel

    @przyjaciel

    2 жыл бұрын

    I was hoping he would catch the Ukrainian for 'sour' (кислий, kyslyy) since in Polish the verb for 'pickle' is kisić.

  • @johnymiuraakb1062
    @johnymiuraakb10624 жыл бұрын

    Щиро дякую за дуже цікаве видео, і хоч я чистий японець, зрозумів майже все, бо давно учуся обох мов. Tutaj chciałbym dodać swoją uwagę w związku z tymi dwiema językami, ale po angielsku, żeby to zrozumieli i Polacy i Ukraińcy. Back in '80, when the Communists still ruled in the East, I became interested in the Ukrainian language, having learnt quite a lot of both Polish and Russian. But for us Japanese it was extremely hard to learn Ukrainian at that time, with almost no proper textbooks nor comprehensive dictionaries available, so I decided to go to Canada on working holiday program. I knew then that there are a lot of Ukrainian communities across North America, especially in Canada (Winnipeg, Edmonton etc). Soon after arrival I found many textbooks and dictionaries in English, which helped me self-teach Ukrainian. One day I came across some weird words, for example, 'потяг'. According to modern dictionaries it means 'leaning or inclination', but it didn't match the context. When I saw a sentence like 'потяг стояв на двірці' I almost yelled an eureka, because of course it sounded like Polish 'pociąg stał na dworcu'. In Soviet times no dictionaries published there didn't list 'потяг' in the meaning of train, and 'двірець' for railway station, instead поїзд and вокзал respectively (like Russian). Later I learnt to know that that represents the western variety of the language developed under heavy influence of Polish (with Львів/Lwów as its center), and that many Ukrainians who immigrated into Canada originated from that region. So I might still use those expressions like 'як ся маєте? ', if I had a chance to speak Ukrainian somehow here in Japan. 'Перепрашаю' за довге оповідання, я бажаю вам усім удачи і щасті.

  • @hvilkenlykke6270

    @hvilkenlykke6270

    3 жыл бұрын

    Вітання з України! どうもありがとうございました!

  • @andriyzas1995

    @andriyzas1995

    3 жыл бұрын

    Про щоб не йшлося завжди знайдеться японець, який на цьому знається!

  • @alsagir87

    @alsagir87

    3 жыл бұрын

    приємно, коли люди з інших країн цікавляться твоєю країною і мовою

  • @sbios1

    @sbios1

    3 жыл бұрын

    Ти крутий, чоловіче! Успіху! 👍

  • @syniasynia6736

    @syniasynia6736

    3 жыл бұрын

    Fajnie, że się uczysz tych języków ❤️ I czytając początek komentarza, nieźle Ci one wychodzą. Ja akurat jestem pół Polką pół Ukrainką 🇺🇦🇵🇱 I jak jest w Japonii? Zawsze chciałam ją zobaczyć, bo kultura i wasze jedzenie podobno bardzo różni się od Polskich i Ukraińskich.

  • @namadiri1444
    @namadiri14444 жыл бұрын

    False translator friendly words: Сметана - sour cream in Ukrainian and Russian Śmietanka - cream in Polish I read about it many years ago in a textbook It was so funny to finally actually see a Pole and a Ukrainian getting confused by it :)

  • @grzegorzgrzesiak7498

    @grzegorzgrzesiak7498

    4 жыл бұрын

    Śmietana is also sour cream in polish. Śmietanka is cream.

  • @vvladchik

    @vvladchik

    4 жыл бұрын

    To clear the confusion: "Vershky" in Ukrainian means the cream collected "z verhu" = "z wierzchu" = "from the top" of milk. They are sweet and Polish equivalent is "śmietanka" indeed. "Śmietana" is "kwaśnа"/"kysla"/"sour". Funny enough "sour cream" is literally translated into Polish as "kwaśnа śmietanka". Pozdrawiam!

  • @NicolasRomanenko

    @NicolasRomanenko

    4 жыл бұрын

    Google translator translates the same “sour cream” and “cream” to “smetana” )))

  • @vvladchik

    @vvladchik

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@NicolasRomanenko Google translator is no authority for me, although I've double checked, and for me it translated cream as "śmietanka". You are better off if you type "Cream" (dairy product) in English wiki and then change the language to Polish. You'll see the difference with google translator.

  • @agatameble721

    @agatameble721

    4 жыл бұрын

    I live near the Ukrainian border (I'm Polish) and a person from Ukraine asked me about cream in a supermarket and we got confused as well. 😁 But we understood each other quite well apart from that .

  • @pavloshved6864
    @pavloshved6864 Жыл бұрын

    I love the way you both treat each other languages with respect! Thanks a lot, guys! Greeting from Ukraine) tak trzymać! Так і треба нам жити далі!

  • @germancastrocatano8130
    @germancastrocatano81302 жыл бұрын

    Estudié en Lviv, hablo ruso, entiendo mucho el ucraniano y logré entender mucho de lo que explicabas en polaco. Son muy interesantes tus videos de comparaciones entre idiomas. Saludos desde Cali, Colombia.

  • @MrStanRod
    @MrStanRod4 жыл бұрын

    Znam wielu Ukraińców to są bardzo porządni i mili ludzie..., piękne kobiety ..., pracowici mężczyźni ..., szanuje Ukraińców i miałem przyjemność pomóc kilku Ukraińcom w Szczecinie... są serdeczni i uczciwi..., takich tylko znam Ukraińców. Sympatyczna piękna dziewczyna..., dziękuje za mile spędzony czas z Wami... Stanisław Rodziewicz

  • @nellkells3290

    @nellkells3290

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@Foreigner-ls2mx Or vice versa

  • @nellkells3290

    @nellkells3290

    4 жыл бұрын

    Сердечне вітання з України:)

  • @TanjaMokhammad

    @TanjaMokhammad

    4 жыл бұрын

    Приємно чути! Дякую!

  • @12morino

    @12morino

    4 жыл бұрын

    Przecież to są Twoi ziomale którzy dojechali po kryzysie Ukraińskim którzy prawie albo wcale nie mówią po ukraińsku a raczej po rosyjsku.

  • @nikolaiantokhin9795

    @nikolaiantokhin9795

    4 жыл бұрын

    Хохочу)))

  • @EugeniaKuznetsova1
    @EugeniaKuznetsova14 жыл бұрын

    Thanks everyone for your comments! It was such a fun experience! Cream and sour cream makes me laugh :) Also merda ogonem was the hardest part for me!

  • @user-jc3zg9rr4v

    @user-jc3zg9rr4v

    4 жыл бұрын

    И тебе спасибо за участие в проекте Норберта. 😼 Було дуже цiкаво подивитися на вашу розмову.

  • @maksimlipecki232

    @maksimlipecki232

    4 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for you beauty and knowledge Eugenia.

  • @stomil91

    @stomil91

    4 жыл бұрын

    Hope you'll make another video someday :)

  • @glenkeating7333

    @glenkeating7333

    4 жыл бұрын

    I live in Canada. I speak English and a bit of French. I love languages! The more languages we learn, the better we understand each other!

  • @Vitaliuz

    @Vitaliuz

    4 жыл бұрын

    Спасибо за провление большого энтузиазма, ибо девушке из версии "Польша и Россия" было совсем не до эксперимента, и "звание" репортёра (который уже по определению должен быть начитанным, и немного лингвистом/этимологом) она не оправдала. Словами не передать насколько интересно было смотреть видео, в котором обе стороны были заинтересованы в диалоге. =)

  • @LargenirGK
    @LargenirGK2 жыл бұрын

    Очень позабавило, как девушка вполне логично поняла "niewidomyh" (слепых), как "невідомих" (неизвестных) - но умозаклчение при этом сделала в итоге совершенно верное, подумав о другой "функции" собаки ))

  • @andrewshepitko6354

    @andrewshepitko6354

    Жыл бұрын

    Нічого дивного, навпаки як кажете логічно. Проте, дуже смішно було в іншому відео, як поляк говорить про вбрання, а росіянин розуміє як ''убіратса''. Вбрання то якийсь одяг, те що одягаємо. В російській є слово ''убор'', але тут стає зрозуміло, що росіяни не розуміють значення цього слова, що воно походить від ''вбиратися''. Тобто запозичили слово з української, а певного його значення не знають.

  • @notfound9816

    @notfound9816

    Жыл бұрын

    @@andrewshepitko6354 а ты я смотрю по образованию лингвист раз такое привычное для русского языка слово сразу украинским делаешь?

  • @andrewshepitko6354

    @andrewshepitko6354

    Жыл бұрын

    @@notfound9816 ''прівичнає для русскава'' 😂🤡

  • @notfound9816

    @notfound9816

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@andrewshepitko6354во первых, что смешного? Во вторых, к чему этот смайл, зачем мне знать что ты клоун?

  • @phYT01
    @phYT012 жыл бұрын

    I remember being on a night bus in London where two very drunk girls were having a conversation. One was Polish, the other was Slovak. Each spoke in their own language. They appeared to be able to understand each other but it's possible the intellectual level of the conversation wasn't very demanding.

  • @j.vdubois5074

    @j.vdubois5074

    2 жыл бұрын

    Haha, as a Slovak there are definitelly some mindfucks. For instance “čerstvý/czerstwy” means “fresh” in Slovak but “stale” in Polish. That was why I got old bread as a side to my meal from one confused waiter in Poland ;)

  • @byali4360

    @byali4360

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@j.vdubois5074 'Mindfucks' I think is the right word describing this. There are tales circling around in Poland about some Polish guy getting slapped by the Czech waitress because he asked her to "look for something" (szukać) for him. It turns out that (šukat) means something different there, something more funny.

  • @j.vdubois5074

    @j.vdubois5074

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@byali4360 Yes, this is one of the earlier stories when this young woman in Tatras said “szukam mojego taty”. The looks of people around were priceless.

  • @byali4360

    @byali4360

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@j.vdubois5074 There's a TV Show on YT with Ewa Farna giving examples of completely normal Polish words and publicity laughing for some unknown reason.

  • @j.vdubois5074

    @j.vdubois5074

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@byali4360 It is a common trope of Polish language having these two word terms for everything with adjective behind noun - like let's say "samochód elektryczny" which is the other way around in Czech and Slovak so the term would be more like "elektryczny samochód". It is also about the intonation and melody. It is hard to describe it, it sounds like if you do not know what you are talking about, like you are clueless "ahh, I mean car, .. ehmm car ... electrical? ". It is just funny for us.

  • @traveldaria
    @traveldaria4 жыл бұрын

    W tym roku spędziłem 3 tygodnie na Ukrainie będąc na wakacjach, objechaliśmy cały kraj i powiem Wam tyle: wcześniej byliśmy w 18 krajach europejskich w tym na Balkanach, Turcji i tak miłych i sympatycznych ludzi jak na Ukrainie nie spotkaliśmy nigdzie. Ludzie byli nam bardzo pomocni, śpieszyli z pomocą. Co do języka jest bardzo podobny bardziej podobny niż słowacki czy czeski, wiele słów jest identycznych. Pozdrowienia dla Ukraińców

  • @CloudlessStudio

    @CloudlessStudio

    4 жыл бұрын

    Bardzo ciekawe, powiem ci ze jak bylem na Słowacji to o wiele więcej rozumiałem niż w Kijowie

  • @lililaj

    @lililaj

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@CloudlessStudio Bo w Kijowie niestety większość rozmawia albo po rosyjsku, albo posługują się mieszanką ukr-ros, tzw. "surżyk".

  • @TanjaMokhammad

    @TanjaMokhammad

    4 жыл бұрын

    Дякую, Jarek Jarek!

  • @dmitriydmitrov2023

    @dmitriydmitrov2023

    4 жыл бұрын

    Djakyu, mi zavjdy radi dobrym ludam

  • @mariuszlech9173

    @mariuszlech9173

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@CloudlessStudio Tak, ja też tak miałem, pomimo że znam rosyjski, ale wiesz jak to jest , karzdy ma swojego konika. A co do sielankowości życia i ludzi na Ukrainie ,to ja byłem 2 razy po i spotkałem i za pierwszym i za 2 razem niefajnych Ukraińców, choć więcej było tych pozytywnych i miłych.Za dużo coś tej sielskość go spotkał albo farciarz.

  • @armandoramos3106
    @armandoramos31062 жыл бұрын

    Привет, Норберт! Я мексиканец из города Мехико. Поздравляю Вас за очень интересное видео. Я выучил русский язык 5 лет в Киеве и потом 4 года в Москве. Во время прибывания в Киеве я хотел учить и украинский, но не получилось, не смотря на мои усилия, по тому, что в Киеве говорили преимущественно по-русски. По скольку я хорошо говорил по-русски, у людей говорящих по-украински не было терпения, чтобы говорить со мной по-украински. Я очень жалел что мне не удалось выучить украинский. Так вот, теперь, я учу польский язык уже почти три года с не плохим успехом, думаю, что понимаю около 60 - 70 просентов написанного текста и благодаря вашему видео я осознал, что я теперь стал понимать много украинского языка, то о чём я мечтал когда жил в Киеве. Спасибо Вам за интересное видео и буду ждать ваше дальнейшие выпуски а также подписываться на ваш канал и нажать на колокольчик. Желаю дальнейших успехов.

  • @user-ps5yy9gy2x

    @user-ps5yy9gy2x

    2 жыл бұрын

    Неудивительно амиго , я уже тридцать лет как киевлянин и плохо разговариваю по украински. Но сейчас уже больше украинского языка в Киеве.

  • @non-applicable.

    @non-applicable.

    2 жыл бұрын

    Русский на высшем уровне! 👍👍👍Мне бы так по-испански говорить!

  • @andrewshepitko6354

    @andrewshepitko6354

    Жыл бұрын

    Відтепер російської мови в Києві і взагалі в Україні ставатиме все менше

  • @armandoramos3106

    @armandoramos3106

    Жыл бұрын

    @@non-applicable. большое спасибо, дорогая Аннушка! ♥

  • @dayzed13

    @dayzed13

    Жыл бұрын

    дам совет, в следующий раз когда захотите приехать в Украину, приезжайте во Львов. Там 95% населения говорит по украински, да и город очень красивый

  • @Valentyn01
    @Valentyn012 жыл бұрын

    Прекрасное видео.

  • @alinas.2483
    @alinas.2483 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this really unique opportunity to listen to Polish-Ukrainian conversation! I enjoyed it a lot. Ukrainian is my native language. But despite i know just a few words in Polish i could follow and understand Polish very well. It was really fascinating to watch you two speaking your own languages but understanding each other. And subtitles in English were helpful in case of some words that were difficult to guess! Great collaboration! 😊

  • @AlfaOmegaAO
    @AlfaOmegaAO4 жыл бұрын

    Мерда огонем > смердить огнём > дышать огнём... Блин, вилять хвостом, чтоооо? ))) Мозг, ты меня обманул!

  • @user-eb4oo1vq8l

    @user-eb4oo1vq8l

    4 жыл бұрын

    Смердить, это на русском Воняет

  • @ranid0072

    @ranid0072

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@user-eb4oo1vq8l так в этом и юмор

  • @Fuckaliy

    @Fuckaliy

    4 жыл бұрын

    Мэрда с болгарского - шевелит

  • @shuranick8375

    @shuranick8375

    4 жыл бұрын

    а Воняет это Пахнет.Когда поляк нюхает хорошие духи ,говорит: добже Воняе. Если не нравится :Смердит.

  • @statusquo9520

    @statusquo9520

    4 жыл бұрын

    мэрда же на испанском дерьмо

  • @silrist654
    @silrist6543 жыл бұрын

    Привіт з Вінниці) Cześć z Winnicy, bardzo jest ciekawo oglądać kiedy gadasz po polsku i po ukraińsku, i rozumiesz dwie strony)

  • @matthewkelly2399
    @matthewkelly23992 жыл бұрын

    This was hugely informative and entertaining. Thank you from Australia (Tasmania).!!!

  • @diode4331
    @diode43312 жыл бұрын

    Був приємно здивований побачити Кузнецову тут! Дякую за файне відео, було вельми цікаво, щоправда, як завжди (=

  • @ivanpodraza7233
    @ivanpodraza72334 жыл бұрын

    I have to admit that I watched this video at least 3 times, because, well, Zhenia is a perfect example of East Slavic beauty, but also because I like Ukrainian language a lot since it reminds me of Ikavian dialect of Croatian, which is mostly present in Southern Croatia (Dalmatia), but also in some parts of Eastern Croatia, Bosnia and Northern Serbia. To give a few examples: where in Standard Croatian you would say tijelo (body), svježe (fresh) svijet (world), svjetlo (a light), in Ikavian you would say tilo, sviže, svit, svitlo, which is exactly the same in Ukrainian. This sounds very exotic and kind of ''cute'' to me. And here are the words in Croatian: 0. Životinja (animal); zvijer (wild animal, beast); čovjek (man, human being) 1. Pas (dog) 2. Ovca (sheep), ovčica (small sheep); janje (lamb); vuna (wool), runo (fleece) 3. Kokoš / kokoška (hen), kokot / pijetao / pijevac (cock, rooster), and he sings (pjeva) ''kukuriku'' in the morning 4. Slon (elephant), slonica (female elephant), velike uši (big ears), slon u penziji / slon u mirovini / umirovljeni slon (retired elephant) 5. Krava (cow), krava pase travu (a cow is grazing grass), krava daje mlijeko (a cow gives milk), bik (bull), tele (calf); sir (cheese), vrhnje (cream), kiselo vrhnje (sour cream) 6. Jednorog (unicorn), jedan rog na čelu (one horn on his forhead) By the way, the word for dragon in Polish - smok, reminded me a lot of Smaug, the infamous dragon from Hobbit, and then I found some sources that claim that Tolkien actually took this word from Polish. In Croatian dragon is zmaj, which possibly has the same root as the word for a snake - zmija.

  • @Ecolinguist

    @Ecolinguist

    4 жыл бұрын

    I love when foreign authors take Polish words and adapt them in their stories. :D TO me it was funny when Zhenia thought I was saying that 'the animal didn't have arms' when I was sayin 'it has a horn.' 😂

  • @Martina-Kosicanka

    @Martina-Kosicanka

    4 жыл бұрын

    Same with Orell, the wildling in GoT Series. He was able to transcendent to body of his "pet" eagle

  • @user-vd1gk1zf8p

    @user-vd1gk1zf8p

    4 жыл бұрын

    Some Croatians came from Ukrainian roots.

  • @konig231

    @konig231

    4 жыл бұрын

    I am Ukrainian and couple days ago I have been to Croatia. I have noticed that lots of words are similar to ours but also simultaneously to russian. E.g. svijet - svit (ua) and svet (ru). In general, if you know these two languages, you will understand a lot in Croatia. One word confused me though. It is the “cat”. In Ukrainian we say “kit”, in Russian it is “kot” even in German it’s “der Katter”. But in Croatian it is “mačka”. It would be interesting to know when did Slavs start calling their cats differently, lol :)

  • @alexhusiev8973

    @alexhusiev8973

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@konig231 kot -> kočka(czech) -> mačka(slovak)

  • @timg.5400
    @timg.54004 жыл бұрын

    This is just unbelievable! I'm from north-eastern part of Slovenia and I’ve just found out that are dialects that are spoken here in north-eastern part of Slovenia (especially Haloški, Prleški and Styrian dialects) in terms of pronunciation, phonological system etc. much more similar to Ukrainian language than to standard Slovenian language and other Slovenian dialects. ?!??

  • @oleksandrkaplun1919

    @oleksandrkaplun1919

    4 жыл бұрын

    In the end of 19-th century many Ukrainians from Halyčyna, which was the part of Austro-Hungarian empire as well as Slovenia, emigrated to Vojevodina and Croatia. Maybe, do you know whether Ukrainians also emigrated to Slovenia?? It might affect for the language of local population.:)

  • @Slaweniskadela

    @Slaweniskadela

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@oleksandrkaplun1919 The same is as kajkavian croatian I find :) When I was listening to this video along with my brother he said: "show that to grandmother, it sounds so kajkavian when ukrainians speak and it's fairly easy to understand them. Many people from Eastern Slovenia as well as Northern were sent to war to Halyčina by Austro-Hungarian government. My greatgrandfather was one of them. So where my slovenian part of ancestors.

  • @Slaweniskadela

    @Slaweniskadela

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@oleksandrkaplun1919 Skilki meni vidomo, Ukraincji ne prijizžali do tej časti Slovenii. Ale mae odna spivačka kajkavsko-horvatsko-ukrajinska. II zvaty Lidyja Bajuk. Dumaju ii bat'ko byv Ukrajinciem. Ale ja ne pewen.

  • @oleksandrkaplun1919

    @oleksandrkaplun1919

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@Slaweniskadela Are you Slovenian? Чи українець з Галичини зі словенським корінням?:)

  • @timg.5400

    @timg.5400

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@oleksandrkaplun1919 As far as I know there was not any noticeable migration into north-eastern part of Slovenia from Austro-Hungarian part of Ukraine, but dialects that are spoken in north-eastern Croatia (Kajkavian dialect) are very similar to dialects in north-eastern Slovenia. All this people were always in close contacts, reason is that the area is very flat (Pannonian Plain), while other parts of Slovenia are very hilly and mountainous, because of that Slovene has a lot of different dialects. I think that dialects in north-eastern Slovenia were not affected by innovations of other Slovenian dialects in significant way and stayed more “common Slavic” and what is more Slavic people lived in the territory where nowadays is Hungary, before Hungarians entered the Pannonian Plain. They even formed Slavic state that was called Lower Pannonia (Spodnja Panonija) and those Slavic people were bridge between ancestors od Slovenians and Ukrainians.

  • @fiedel
    @fiedel2 жыл бұрын

    This is a fascinating format.

  • @pannady
    @pannady2 жыл бұрын

    Вiтаю друзи! Я из Молдовы, хорошо понимаю Украинский, особенно если медленно говорят, после этого видео уже думаю что понимаю польский, но это далеко не так. Однажды на таможне видел группу поляков и все что я слышал было - пше пше пше;). Норберт ты делаешь великолепный контент! Слава Украине!

  • @XXL_17

    @XXL_17

    Жыл бұрын

    Последнее лишние

  • @pannady

    @pannady

    Жыл бұрын

    @@XXL_17 как и твоя 47я хромосома

  • @XXL_17

    @XXL_17

    Жыл бұрын

    @@pannady по умному ответил, молодец)

  • @nataliyadanylyuk1240

    @nataliyadanylyuk1240

    8 ай бұрын

    ГЕРОЯМ СЛАВА!

  • @DominikD
    @DominikD4 жыл бұрын

    Great job! As a native speaker of both Polish and Ukrainian was a lot of fun to watch!

  • @soniqaaa8002
    @soniqaaa80024 жыл бұрын

    Спасибо большое! Хорошее дело делаешь! Показываешь близость языков

  • @Ecolinguist

    @Ecolinguist

    4 жыл бұрын

    Dziękuję bardzo! Cieszę się, że ci się podoba! 🤓

  • @valentinachekhovich1337
    @valentinachekhovich13372 жыл бұрын

    That was awesome! Thank you so much, I enjoyed it. God bless you.

  • @armymang6472
    @armymang64722 жыл бұрын

    Witam z Polski! Uwielbiam Twoje filmy. Cieszę się, że widzę kolejny Twój film

  • @ill4374
    @ill43744 жыл бұрын

    Спасибо большое Автору за то, что сближает народы

  • @krueckschloss
    @krueckschloss4 жыл бұрын

    Slovak seems to be in the middle between Polish and Ukrainian. I can understand Norbert well because he speaks so clearly. But the wovel movement in Ukrainian is „more compatible“ with Slovak. Like the „rog“ pronounced ROH, which is exactly what it is in Slovak: roh. The prolonged o pronounced as U in Polish is hard to digest ;-) Well done Norbert. Keep this up. I love your comparison series!

  • @Ecolinguist

    @Ecolinguist

    4 жыл бұрын

    I hope I didn't upset your stomach too much by prolonging my u-s 😂

  • @krueckschloss

    @krueckschloss

    4 жыл бұрын

    Ecolinguist hehe, not literally ;-)

  • @Ecolinguist

    @Ecolinguist

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@krueckschloss Polish "Ó"? 🤢

  • @Robertoslaw.Iksinski

    @Robertoslaw.Iksinski

    4 жыл бұрын

    Polske "Ó" je trochu mylne pre Slovakov a Čechov, pretože v dnešnej polštine všetky samohlasky su kratke, tak nie je to dlhe "O". V podstate polske "Ó" je to ekvivalent slovenskeho "Ô" a českeho "Ů", ale je poużivany len v ortografie ako zvyšok po staropolštine, ale ktory v dnešnej polštine vyslovuje sa rovnako ako obyčajne kratke "U" ;-)

  • @krueckschloss

    @krueckschloss

    4 жыл бұрын

    Ecolinguist yes. But don’t worry. I would never eat a polish words. Too many Z‘s ;-)

  • @serg2205
    @serg22052 жыл бұрын

    Отличное видео Норберт! Как и всегда!

  • @BaikalSilverWind
    @BaikalSilverWind3 ай бұрын

    Ребята, вы такие приятные! Нравится вас слушать. Конечно, понимаю не всё, но это уже третье видео и понемногу начитаю привыкать и понимать. Спасибо за науку и пример отличного человеческого общения!

  • @birosh
    @birosh4 жыл бұрын

    Slovak guy watching this...understood both. But Polish was easier.

  • @ikamp3

    @ikamp3

    4 жыл бұрын

    Which Slovak guy?

  • @Priroda1234.Belarisi.

    @Priroda1234.Belarisi.

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@ikamp3 што блядь

  • @Priroda1234.Belarisi.

    @Priroda1234.Belarisi.

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@ikamp3 нехера не понил но было интересно

  • @andrzejnogal2155

    @andrzejnogal2155

    3 жыл бұрын

    ​@GAgaV8 O kaszubskim i śląskim łatwo się zapomina, co?

  • @AxlAveursus
    @AxlAveursus4 жыл бұрын

    Душевные такие видео! Идея просто замечательная. Спасибо!

  • @michaelrobinson167
    @michaelrobinson16711 ай бұрын

    Really fun video!

  • @polveczko
    @polveczko2 жыл бұрын

    Mam przyjaciółkę z Ukrainy, ja mówię po polsku a ona po ukrainsku, ale jakoś się rozumiemy haha

  • @polyMATHY_Luke
    @polyMATHY_Luke3 жыл бұрын

    Both languages make me fall in love with your countries! 😍I wish I could speak them. Some day...!!!! 🇵🇱 🇺🇦 ♥️

  • @triumwir4444

    @triumwir4444

    2 жыл бұрын

    Funny ;D I'm Polish and I can speak them both without greater problem.... I just listen to ukrainian music and remember not even the words but the phonetic difference between them and they are easily the same ;D

  • @InhigoAlai

    @InhigoAlai

    Жыл бұрын

    You already have enough to do making videos with undisguised Russophobia and Hispanophobia.

  • @folzy3291

    @folzy3291

    8 ай бұрын

    @@triumwir4444 👍👍👍

  • @goranjovic3174
    @goranjovic31744 жыл бұрын

    As a Serbian nativespeaker i understand you both too ! :) But unestly little bit Polish is more similar to Serbian , it seems :) But .. some words are closer to Ukranian but in less percent in generally :) Both languages are very close to Serbian anyway ! :) :) History telling that not so far in history we lived together and based on languges it is completely true , no any doubt in it :) Brothers and Sister we are from same Slavic rooth :)

  • @Ecolinguist

    @Ecolinguist

    4 жыл бұрын

    Thanks! Lots of love to you too! :)

  • @goranjovic3174

    @goranjovic3174

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@Ecolinguist neznam kako da ti dam srce moj poljski brate - bracie tu na you tube pa je zbog toga samo obican lajk :D :) ))

  • @lollylula6399

    @lollylula6399

    4 жыл бұрын

    Sława 💞

  • @goranjovic3174

    @goranjovic3174

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@lollylula6399 Slawa ! :)

  • @_vital_p

    @_vital_p

    4 жыл бұрын

    Ukrainian is closer to Polish than to Serbian although closer to Serbian than to Russian. When I was in Serbia I, as a Ukrainian speaking person, have managed to explain what I want with a slight difficulty.

  • @borynets
    @borynets Жыл бұрын

    Cześć, Norbert. Dziękuję za wspaniały kanał KZread i ciekawe nagrania. Rozumiem, że temu nagraniu już trzy lata, i ktoś powiedział Ci o śmietanie i śmietance. Ale tak, to trochę się różni w naszych językach. Mleko - молоко, Śmietana - сметана, Śmietanka - вершки (до кави) - (werszky). Wcześniej nie rozumiałem tego, kiedy ktoś proponował mnie śmietanki do kawy😁 bo nie chciałem do swojej kawy tej śmietany, którą dodaję się do pierogów czy barszczu 😁

  • @yuriymusayev8127
    @yuriymusayev8127 Жыл бұрын

    Good channel. I am Ukrainian, have studied Polish 3 months. Now can speak rather good to comunicate and understand 100%. Lexically and grammatically Ukrainian and Polish 95% the same. Some vowels and consonants sound different, this is the reason why for people, who never heard the neighbour language before, it is difficult to understand it. According to my experience, with zero knowledge of Polish, after 2 weeks in Warsaw I started to understand 80%.

  • @tosieniemiesci7627

    @tosieniemiesci7627

    Жыл бұрын

    Czytałam ostatnio opinię Iwana Franki o Mickiewiczu. Pisał, że dobrych ukraińskich tłumaczeń nie ma, bo przecież każdy czyta w oryginale i rozumie. Eh, były czasy:)

  • @jaegeroo
    @jaegeroo4 жыл бұрын

    i just realized how much i love other slavic languages, really enjoyed this experience

  • @wojciech5177
    @wojciech51774 жыл бұрын

    zwierzę domowe - drakon? :D

  • @chemykl

    @chemykl

    4 жыл бұрын

    ogonem kinda sounds like "with fire" (wogon = fire) and "merda" sounds like "metaty" which means throw or toss, I think that's probably what lead to that answer

  • @user-uc2ec7sh9c

    @user-uc2ec7sh9c

    4 жыл бұрын

    Słowo „ogon” jest podobne do rosyjskiego „огонь” lub ukraińskiego „вогонь” (po polsku "ogień"), ale zupełnie inaczej niż tłumaczenie słowa "ogon" na rosyjski ("хвост") i ukraiński ("хвіст").

  • @artemkh8944

    @artemkh8944

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@chemykl merda sounds like mierda in spanish. Ofc when you know something in spanish. Haha. Or merde in french. xDDD

  • @Guillhez

    @Guillhez

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@artemkh8944 i speak portuguese so I was amused by this 😂 (mierda/merde in portuguese is "merda")

  • @KimCornerUA

    @KimCornerUA

    4 жыл бұрын

    Czemu nie?

  • @LeninKGB
    @LeninKGB2 жыл бұрын

    That was an exceptionally curious and nice bi-lingual conversation,the "false friends" "smietane" confusion was notable,this type of words is present in other languages as well:) By the way,spoken ukrainian may vary significantly from region to region,for example i was quite surprised when i discovered that "бардзо" was not part of the official Ukrainian language,even though i've heard it tones of times in the Vinnica region.Once again-awesome episode,thank you and your guests for the remarkable content!

  • @dimitrifilonov9707
    @dimitrifilonov97072 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for the subtitles in English, very funny! Great job!!

  • @Khaarne
    @Khaarne4 жыл бұрын

    вовна - ukr wełna - pol wool - eng дівчина просто забула це слово, але воно дуже схоже на польске )

  • @EugeniaKuznetsova1

    @EugeniaKuznetsova1

    4 жыл бұрын

    що ви всі такі суворі з цією вовною?) я ж потім згадала! і навіть вовняний светр сказала))

  • @vladdmytruk2955

    @vladdmytruk2955

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@EugeniaKuznetsova1 та ніхто не суворий, ясне діло, що ви не забули це слово, радше воно просто вам не спало на думку. Вам теж варто зрозуміти, що всі українці як дивились відео вигукували "та це ж вовна, ну йо-майо, як так - ВОоовна ж"))), і робили вони більше через внутрішнє хвилювання, кожен хотів, щоб ви швидше його згадали, і коментарі звідси такі, не гнівайтесь ;) Я чітко на собі відчув цю емоцію, ніби розчарування, але це не ваша вина, просто так сталось, далі ви трохи наслухались поляка і діло пішло, ви молодець. Я наприклад вовну відразу згадав, а от інші слова деякі довше спадали на думку, але знаємо ми усі їх добре. Просто люди переживали, щоб ви не впустили вовну)))

  • @kovpash

    @kovpash

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@EugeniaKuznetsova1 Я от розумів поляка набагато гірше. Так що все норм)

  • @ostapgordiyenko3612

    @ostapgordiyenko3612

    4 жыл бұрын

    ще кажуть бавовна)

  • @zamoredaleko

    @zamoredaleko

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@ostapgordiyenko3612 бавовна - cotton

  • @YanaBogdanova
    @YanaBogdanova4 жыл бұрын

    It was interesting to watch even as a Bulgarian. I have learned some Polish but never learned Ukrainian. But the Ukrainian is closer to Bulgarian and I understand it better. It was very funny when she actually gives you hint about the cow :D:D:D

  • @vyrobnyk6362

    @vyrobnyk6362

    4 жыл бұрын

    This is because of Church Slavonic language

  • @elenal7559

    @elenal7559

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@vyrobnyk6362 also because of Cyrillic alphabet :)

  • @pitur5492

    @pitur5492

    4 жыл бұрын

    Bulgarian , ukrainian, belarusian, russian are the closest languages.

  • @alexanderwhite8320
    @alexanderwhite8320 Жыл бұрын

    I am native Latvian speaker, I know English and Russian well. I understand Ukrainian (have lived for some time in Ukraine) and I can fully understand what she says, but Polish is challenging for me. Like some words that have no similar roots in UA, RU or LV language.

  • @olyakuzina2954
    @olyakuzina2954 Жыл бұрын

    It's a pleasure to watch and to listen to you guys. Thank you! It's just, in the central part of Ukraine people use the word 'kogut' and in Vinnytsya as well. My grandma used it. She lived in a country side that is 30 km from Vinnytsya.

  • @eljuano28
    @eljuano284 жыл бұрын

    I just started studying Ukrainian this year. This is very interesting to see. I understand just enough of her to tell what generally she's saying, (and I have a long way to go,) but I can definitely hear words from you that I somewhat recognize too. I had no idea the two languages were so similar.

  • @Ecolinguist

    @Ecolinguist

    4 жыл бұрын

    What's your native language then? :)

  • @eljuano28

    @eljuano28

    4 жыл бұрын

    I grew up speaking English and my grandmother spoke Spanish to me.

  • @Ecolinguist

    @Ecolinguist

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@eljuano28 Great! Good luck with learning Ukrainian. 🤓You definitely should watch my Spanish Portuguese video and let me know how it went → kzread.info/dash/bejne/lYNryLKAp8a1ddI.html&t=

  • @witek7755

    @witek7755

    4 жыл бұрын

    Actually, more than 80% of vocabulary is similar. Ukrainian has more words shared with Polish language than with Russian, even Russian and Ukrainian are Eastern Slavic languages and Polish is western Slavic language. We are just neighbors and the border dialects are even more similar.

  • @vladdmytruk2955

    @vladdmytruk2955

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@eljuano28 if you learn Ukrainian, you will be able to understand a whole bunch of slavic languages more or less. Good luck.

  • @romanstudia
    @romanstudia4 жыл бұрын

    I love your videos! Please, keep making them! In my opinion one of the main difficulties that Eastern Slavs face when they hear Polish are the nasal sounds, that make even similar words sound unfamiliar. Also if people knew that r is often followed by “z” sound, which doesn’t happen in Ukrainian/Russian, it would make things much easier to understand!

  • @SzalonyKucharz

    @SzalonyKucharz

    4 жыл бұрын

    Z does not often follow r. The 'rz' digraph is how palatalized (soft) r is pronounced in Polish, in its contemporary version identical to ż, which is almost the same sound as ж in Cyrylic alphabet. Hence, a river (река in Russian, řeka in Czech) becomes rzeka in Polish (and if we were to switch to Cyrylic, the best transliteration would be жeкa). In the same vein, Russian орех = Slovak orech = Polish orzech. And республика = Rzeczpospolita. :) However, Russian hand (рука) becomes ręka in Polish, so there is no palatalization or r (therefore no merging of rz into ż), but another typical Polish transformation of sounds takes place, with u (Russian y) being nasalized into ę. Similarily, Czech Uzeniny are wĘdliny in Polish, and HUngary are WĘgry.

  • @tymmiara5967

    @tymmiara5967

    4 жыл бұрын

    I think nasal sounds themselves are not as big of a problem as the fact that around 15th century Polish has mixed up the big and small yus completely. It would be easier if Polish had retained consistency, with other languages i.e. retained "ę" wherever there is a russian Я sound, or South Slavic "e" sound and "ą" where there is a corresponding u-sound in other languages. For example, "oględać" instead of "oglądać", in order to fit in with south-slavic "gledati" and east-slavic "оглядывать") and also used "bądą" instead of "będę", in order to fit in with "budu"). These inconsistencies have introduced lots of irregularities in the Polish language itself, like "bądź"/"będę", "wziąłem"/"wzięłam", "gałąź"/"gałęzie". If the pronunciation of "ę" was also closer to nasal ä-sound and "ą" closer to nasal ų-sound, as it has been resolved in the construction of the interslavic language, then speech would be much more similar to the neighbouring languages. And now that we talk about it, probably getting rid of "ą" symbol for a nasal o-sound is probably also a good step forward. As to "rz, sz, cz" digraphs, it is easier to write on a foreign keyboard and in foreign documents than if we had ř, š, č. But the rule is quite simple with "rz". Wherever in proto-slavic r is followed by ě, we have "rz". Orěh -> orzech, drěvo->drzewo, trěba->trzeba.

  • @SzalonyKucharz

    @SzalonyKucharz

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@tymmiara5967 Yeah, and the differences between 'okrąg' and 'okręg', 'krąg' and 'kręg', as well as 'chęć' and 'chuć'.

  • @lukask7445

    @lukask7445

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@SzalonyKucharz I doubt if Ж is the best transliteration. Eastern languages lost connection with ʒ sound in such cases and therefore they speak simply 'r'. The letter Ж is related to western Ż or Ž (жінка, життя etc.). Converting RZ or Ř into Ж would be disorthographic.

  • @lukask7445

    @lukask7445

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Jonathan Vera Jonathan, I'm a Polish native. There is a strong ethymological/morphological rule: if a word historically had R (and sometimes keeps R in other languages in a family) and now it is ʒ then must be written 'rz'. No exceptions. Russian Ж corresponds to Ż in words in other slavic languages. R hasn't transformed to ʒ sound in Russian and they still speak it (reka, more etc.).

  • @andrewkuplevakhskyi3562
    @andrewkuplevakhskyi3562 Жыл бұрын

    cześć! dziękuję! uczę się polskiego. it was pretty easy to follow you looking at the subtitles. good luck!

  • @TolstoRed
    @TolstoRed Жыл бұрын

    Excellent video!

  • @konstantinfokin
    @konstantinfokin4 жыл бұрын

    I'm Russian, but I speak a little Ukrainian so I could also understand some Polish and I LOVED every second of the video :) It's so amazing how similar Ukrainian and Polish are :) Great video! :)

  • @user-yi4bn8qc1d

    @user-yi4bn8qc1d

    3 жыл бұрын

    Вообще не близко. В чем вы ее нашли?

  • @DonnieKreyden

    @DonnieKreyden

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@user-yi4bn8qc1d да логично, что сходства есть на каждом шагу.

  • @zepter00

    @zepter00

    2 жыл бұрын

    Poland nad Ukraine were one country for long time.

  • @konstantinfokin

    @konstantinfokin

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@zepter00 I know that, but still it's amazing they are still so similar after all this time

  • @Vadim_Andr.

    @Vadim_Andr.

    2 жыл бұрын

    are not similar !

  • @vladua8
    @vladua84 жыл бұрын

    Дуже цікаве відео, вітання з заходу України! Мешкаю 80 км від польського кордону. Bardzo ciekawe wideo, witam ze zachodu Ukrainy mieszkam 80 km od Polskiej granicy.

  • @mikolajtrzeciecki1188
    @mikolajtrzeciecki11882 жыл бұрын

    @Ecolinguist I think the current developments have added more meaning to that conversation, haven't they?

  • @diyandraganov2660
    @diyandraganov26602 жыл бұрын

    Hi there! I watched your video and was surprised that many Polish words completely coincide with the Bulgarian ones. I will give you examples. Lapy, owca, jagne, pies, mleko, slon. slonica, pluwa, smietana, pieje etc. And many of the words are close: keslo-kiselo, kwasne-kwaseno, rogi(roga, rogi), welna-walna. Surprisingly, some Bulgarian words are closer to Polish than Ukrainian words, which are closer to Russian.

  • @piotrekmajkowski5422

    @piotrekmajkowski5422

    2 жыл бұрын

    Się zdziwiłem. Dziękuję :)

  • @wojtekdlugokecki5434
    @wojtekdlugokecki54344 жыл бұрын

    Więcej takich rozmów Polsko - Ukraińskich👍🏻

  • @kosiakevych

    @kosiakevych

    4 жыл бұрын

    Знаю слово вєнцей, але ніколи не знав як воно пишеться) Дякую Вивчаємо мови разом

  • @LordDamianus

    @LordDamianus

    Жыл бұрын

    NIE!!!!

  • @TheXxinsanexX
    @TheXxinsanexX4 жыл бұрын

    Awesome video, both languages are beautiful

  • @Ecolinguist

    @Ecolinguist

    4 жыл бұрын

    Thank you! 🤗

  • @viktorrodin4143
    @viktorrodin41432 жыл бұрын

    Wow!It's amazing!

  • @jackharlow6217
    @jackharlow6217 Жыл бұрын

    This was so cool to watch.

  • @canko15
    @canko154 жыл бұрын

    Got to admit that "merda ogonem" cracked me up as a native Spanish speaker

  • @Ecolinguist

    @Ecolinguist

    4 жыл бұрын

    I can see why 🤭

  • @Martina-Kosicanka

    @Martina-Kosicanka

    4 жыл бұрын

    What does "ogonem" seem like to you?

  • @canko15

    @canko15

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@Martina-Kosicanka Tail, but that's not the point here

  • @Martina-Kosicanka

    @Martina-Kosicanka

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@canko15 I meant in Spanish of course

  • @telemasz1086

    @telemasz1086

    4 жыл бұрын

    French "merde" is coming to the mind... "Merda" is quite idiomatic; If he had used the popular verb "macha", the ukrainian girl should have understood it instantly.

  • @czkr
    @czkr3 жыл бұрын

    Jej chodziło o to, że śmietanka do kawy jest słodka, niekwaśna. Natomiast klasyczna śmietana jest już produktem kwaśnym czyli 'kisłym'. A tak w ogóle to piękne te dialogi polsko-ukraińskie. Z wielką przyjemnością wysłuchałem.

  • @KbIPbIL0
    @KbIPbIL0 Жыл бұрын

    wow its so wholesome, ive watched your videos before but not with my mother tongue and a language i know and use on the daily (Ukrainian and Polish, respectively) the girl has some amazing insight into both the Ukrainian and the Polish languages, i’m honestly surprised it’s very satisfying to hear how a Polish guy understands my language, so pleasant

  • @HubertPietrusiakP
    @HubertPietrusiakP Жыл бұрын

    Ziomek! Dawaj dalej. Jest super!

  • @user-zh8kp8xr7k
    @user-zh8kp8xr7k3 жыл бұрын

    Спочатку майже нічого не розуміла з того, що він каже, але під кінець відео більш-менш гарно сприймала і розуміла. Доволі цікаво дивитися такого формату відео :)

  • @user-dz1zd5er6s
    @user-dz1zd5er6s4 жыл бұрын

    Дуже цікаве відео! Дякую 👍

  • @Ecolinguist

    @Ecolinguist

    4 жыл бұрын

    Bardzo proszę! 🤗Miło mi.

  • @cosmossfera

    @cosmossfera

    4 жыл бұрын

    А как будет по польски NA UKRAINIE ili W Ukraine?

  • @elenadrachyovs4151
    @elenadrachyovs4151 Жыл бұрын

    I have talked recently with a Polish, a Croatian i razumem rec i movu. Tako nas'i jeziki ima puno slicnogo. СпасиБо за обзор 😊

  • @ls-br9sr
    @ls-br9sr Жыл бұрын

    I'm a Russian learning Ukrainian. Your videos are such a joy, but I shouldn't watch them if I don't want to have a total mess in my head 🙈 ❤

  • @xyeB

    @xyeB

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes

  • @user-sh4mu4qw6m

    @user-sh4mu4qw6m

    11 ай бұрын

    wow, do you live in Russia or abroad? anyway, I'm glad to hear that. greetings from Chernihiv

  • @Kaiserland111
    @Kaiserland1113 жыл бұрын

    As an American who learned Russian for a number of years while living there, it is certainly easier for me to understand the Ukrainian than the Polish in this video. Many of the animal words in Polish are only a couple steps removed from Russian in their pronunciation, but being a non-native speaker of Russian makes it hard to understand even these basic and mostly similar words. This was a super fun video to watch, and I love Slavic languages, so thanks for sharing! большое спасибо.

  • @akcjaxd7863

    @akcjaxd7863

    3 жыл бұрын

    This makes sense because Ukrainian is in the East Slavic language group, just like Russian, so Russian is closer to Ukrainian. The Polish language, along with Czech and Slovak, is in the West Slavic group.

  • @gfhomeNevashedelo

    @gfhomeNevashedelo

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@akcjaxd7863 I don't think so. The biggest difference in pronounciation followed after writing switched to latinitsa. Latin alphabet is not sufficient enough for this purpose. Namely this divided Slavic languages in those 2 groups.

  • @eritain

    @eritain

    3 жыл бұрын

    Lots of false friends between Polish and Ukrainian in this video, which made it very funny. And of course the mistakes that occur just because Polish pronunciation has changed so much since Common Slavic. It's much easier to understand in writing, but out loud it's crazypants. I'm an American who learned first Ukrainian, then Russian. They have a lot of parallel vocabulary because they both descend from Old East Slavic, but when the words are completely different, it's *usually* because Ukrainian borrowed its word from Polish. So I keep running into Polish words that I already knew, I just didn't know that they were Polish -- but I should have known, because they're nothing like the Russian ones.

  • @noone5461

    @noone5461

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@gfhomeNevashedelo really? i never thought about that before, because I think we started speaking first and writing letter, therefore the symbols would be just reflection of the speaking language like you know some nations changed the scripture like Uzbek people use cyrillic I do not know if it made anything effect on pronunciation of their native language Idk correct me if im wrong and they had different interaction with different language speaking tribes

  • @gfhomeNevashedelo

    @gfhomeNevashedelo

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@noone5461 What do you mean by "we started speaking first and writing letters"?

  • @trust__no__one
    @trust__no__one3 жыл бұрын

    Author, thank you a lot! Your idea to examine a mutual understanding among Slavic languages is amazing (not only Slavic)! I was ever interested in this topic, so catch my thick like! Keep up with your work!

  • @motofestbyrec.4585
    @motofestbyrec.4585 Жыл бұрын

    Это божественно! Дуже дякую. Как детектив посмотрел. Thanks a lot Bro! Tha conception is awesome!