Polish cases | PRZYPADKI
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- Опубліковано 8 чер 2024
- This video gives an introduction to Polish cases.
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Here are some examples of sentences with the words "dobry kot" (a good cat) in different cases:
1. Nominative:
To jest dobry kot. - This is a good cat.
2. Genitive:
Nie mam dobrego kota. - I don’t have a good cat
3. Dative:
Daj to dobremu kotu. - Give it to the good cat.
4. Accusative:
Mam dobrego kota. - I have a good cat.
5. Instrumental:
On jest dobrym kotem. - He is a good cat.
6. Locative:
Rozmawiamy o dobrym kocie. - We are talking about the good cat.
7. Vocative:
Dobry kocie! Chodź tutaj! - Good cat! Come here!
Thanks, I was just wondering some examples, I'm glad you put them here
Madam, Polish cases seemed diffcult to understand, but the way you explained them they appear to be quite easy to unederstand.
Please make a video series for all the cases.
You are simply a GREAT teacher. ❤️👍🏿
Polish is very interesting. I studied Russian for a decade and when you say I am looking for Mom. The Russians use the Accusative rather than genitive because the mother is the direct object. я ищу маму Ya Ishu mamu. Good Work Monica. I am determined to learn Polish. You are a great teacher. Russian does not have a vocative case anymore. But Polish is interesting.
Thank you. Looking forward to the deep dive on each case.
For a native English speaker, grammatical cases are novel. But they are not difficult to understand when explained well such you have done. However, the cases are extremely difficult to put in practice! A completely different way of thinking.
I feel you! I'm Polish and to this day I struggle to choose a correct English tense. Like you said, different kind of thinking.
Yeah. English has cases too but we don’t explicitly learn them.
I know this is something you posted a year ago. I just wanted to say: thank you for making it your video series on the cases.
Dziękuję! I'm looking forward for future videos. 👍
Dziękuję bardzo pani Monika🌹🌹🌹
This is an ideal situation to use the vocative case:
Dziękuję bardzo pani Moniko
Look at the last letter: "a" turns into "o".
Thank you Monica excellent explanation on a difficult subject matter, great explanation
Thanks Monica 🙏😊
Excellent video, thanks!
love to watch more videos about grammar. thank you so much
this was a great explanation , I hope to see more case videos
Thank you for the explanations Monika. They are very good. The retention is going to be the difficulty for me. I just may have to resort to speaking the simple present tense and just deal with it!
Zawsze pani przestawiła najlepsze metodą do nauki dla języka polskiego.. Z Wyrazami szacunku
myslę bardzo dobrze :)
You are awesome
Monika, what brand of microphone do you use when you make these lessons?
❤
Can you please finish this playlist with the rest of cases?
Celownik, mieswonik i włacz
DIekuje
Please make more videos ❤
do you plan to make video(s) about verb tenses? that would be just awesome!
Yes, I planning to have some videos on verb conjugations, verb aspects and verb tenses somewhere in the future.
How lucky I am to be Polish. And IT is still difficult for ME. IT is difficult just because ín different party of Poland they have different case or as IT is in Polish slang.
I realize Polish and Czech, you all have 7 cases, those 7 cases in singular forms, are almost the same.😂
I am scared though!
more examples please
Yeah, please
Mianownik: To jest samochód... a nie byle co.
Dopełniacz: Nie mam samochodu... bo jestem biedny.
Celownik: Przyglądam się samochodowi... bo jest piękny.
Biernik: Widzę samochód... który mi pokazujesz.
Narzędnik: Jadę samochodem ,... a nie rowerem.
Miejscownik: Myślę o samochodzie...bo mam dość jeżdżenia autobusem.
Wołacz: Och samochodzie!... tak bardzo cię pragnę
Dzinkuja mam
When will lesson 4?
im also waiting maybe she is preparing
@@drsupremestrange8414 same i am
sorry but it was scary
No, they're absolutely terrifying. Did we do the part where some of the masculine nouns are alive and some of them aren't? I had forgotten about that one until I came upon a discussion on... what is that app called? Well whichever one it is, I took the test before I started and it figured out I knew something and then it skipped a few steps. Duolingo. (I was going to give up and call it the green one)
Back in the '80s I had four books (I actually had seven but only for were attempting to teach you the language) And of course each one had a different approach. So when I hit the wall with one, I went to another one and then another and then I went back and forth and I did this for 10 months before I gave up somewhere between do and na. (Also the lady with the whiteboard was kind of reassuring when she explains that You use na For islands and peninsulas and do for things that are not - And of course the post office, the other thing I can't remember, and Ukraine 🤦♀️ But at least it was a little bit of logic. Now I know the difference between Florida and Massachusetts.
There's one difference now that we have the internet, Google translate, UA-cam - I don't whisper in Polish anymore. I actually speak out loud. I'm still in a room all by myself but at least I'm not whispering.
But by the way it's actually even harder when the cases are named in their Polish names. It was hard enough in their English names.
I remember back in high school when I didn't take Latin because it had five cases and I didn't even know what a case was. Also, dead languages? I was just lucky to live near Cambridge in the '80s because they had lots of bookstores where I really did find four books that tried to teach you Polish, one phrasebook, two dictionaries. I wish I could find them now, I know they're in my house somewhere. So far I have only found one of them.
Nominative, dative does not tell me shit 😂
Locative sure i can get behind that, but when i was learning English i never had to do that in the same way as for Polish
Does Polish have more cases than Russian or Ukranian?
Polish and Ukrainian have 7 cases, Russian has 6