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Polish TAC Team Żubr: Polski Dots

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meramarina
Diglot
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 Message 1 of 34
08 January 2012 at 3:46am | IP Logged 
Oh, I know, I know . . . I promised you a Polish log.

Here it is, and my title for it is Polski Dots ! Why? Besides being a play on words for “polka dots.” there are two reasons:

1. My knowledge of Polish is so miniscule that it is about the size of the dot at the end of this sentence. I expect my learning to exist as little bits and pieces like this for a while, until I "connect the dots," and begin to comprehend the language.

2. "Dotty" is an appropriately descriptive adjective for my writing. It's not a word that’s often used, but the meaning(s) as given by Houghton Mifflin are:

Mentally unbalanced; crazy. That's not nice! I resent that!
Amusingly eccentric or unconventional. Not always amusing, but I try.
Ridiculous or absurd: a dotty scheme. Yeah, I’ve had a few, admittedly.
Having a feeble or unsteady gait; shaky. Irrelevant, but sometimes true.
Obsessively infatuated or enamored. With languages, of course!

Italics mine.

And, by the way, I dislike polka dot patterns.

The goal for this beastly endeavor is to begin it in the good company of my fellow bison friends, and, starting from near-zero comprehension, reach some kind of elementary understanding by the end of the year. That's very vague, I know, but I'll be working on other languages, too, and I don't yet know much about other obligations I'll have this year that may limit my time.

I'm going to try to keep this particular log mostly practical and save the more fanciful or, you might say, the strange, tedious extended-metaphor stuff for the the other log. The other one that will describe my non-Polish language studies and probably a lot of other matters that you really don't want to know.

So, in Polish, I'm aiming mostly for reading comprehension, at least initially. I'd like to use the language to find out more about my Polish heritage, most of which is an inexplicably mysterious and long-hidden family secret. Or perhaps it just got lost as my relatives lived their lives.

Best of luck to the rest of the team: It's great to have company in this new linguistic adventure!


Edited by meramarina on 08 January 2012 at 3:49am

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Teango
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Winner TAC 2010 & 2012
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 Message 2 of 34
08 January 2012 at 10:31am | IP Logged 
A great dotty start to your new mission! I hope you'll soon be migrating from the frozen wastelands of unknowing to the lush and fertile plains of Polish fluency. }:@
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Mooby
Senior Member
Scotland
Joined 6102 days ago

707 posts - 1220 votes 
Speaks: English*
Studies: Polish

 
 Message 3 of 34
08 January 2012 at 10:33am | IP Logged 
Wagons roll!
I think that's all the bisons on the move now - devastation beckons.
Good luck with joining the kropki, I look forward to seeing what emerges :)
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WentworthsGal
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 Message 4 of 34
08 January 2012 at 11:04am | IP Logged 
Looking forward to following your log, especially being a beginner myself too :o)
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Gosiak
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Poland
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241 posts - 361 votes 
Speaks: Polish*, English, German
Studies: Norwegian, Welsh

 
 Message 5 of 34
08 January 2012 at 2:07pm | IP Logged 
Bizony wystartowały!

I'll be following your log (and all the fellow Bisons logs too) trying to be helpful.
Good luck!
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Solfrid Cristin
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 Message 6 of 34
08 January 2012 at 3:20pm | IP Logged 
I am sure you'll love Polish, and find that it is not too difficult. I think of it in much the same way as I think of Spanish: It is not difficult to get to an elementary level, but it is really hard if you want all the grammar right. Since you only aim for the elementary level right now, yous should be ok!

Best of luck!
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meramarina
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 Message 7 of 34
09 January 2012 at 4:41am | IP Logged 
Thank you my studious friends!

I've begun by importing two short audio courses I found at the library: Pimsleur Short Course and another one called Start Speaking Today from Transparent Languages. The library has a good language section, but there's not much Polish.

I started working with the alphabet and basic phonetics. And after having a little look and listen here and there, I can only sit here and cry to myself:

WHAT HAVE I DONE?

Well, the answer is, not much! I'm sure everything will be less frightening before long. I know I will like it.
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Solfrid Cristin
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Norway
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 Message 8 of 34
09 January 2012 at 7:21am | IP Logged 
Find out what study materials you want the most and ask the library to get it for you. If they are any good,
they will. My library is just a small, local one, but they cooperate with every library in Norway, and I would
imagine there is a similar situation in the US. If they can't borrow it from anywhere you can always suggest
they buy it. They can't say more than no :-)


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