Maria Skłodowska Curie was actually Polish! The two elements she discovered, were named after being proud of Poland. "Polon" is named after Poland, and "Radium" is "Rad" in Polish, which actually means Happy 😊
Łukasiewicz not only invented naft lamp , but whole oil rafinery process in petrochemic industry which its used in all world and still upgraded in last decades
Regarding lektor- it's hard to explain, but after a while you stop hearing the lektor and start hearing actor's real voices in the background. Your brain quickly adjusts to it and I love watching movies with lektor, it's one of the concepts that you really have to try to understand because when you just think about it, it doesn't make any sense.
Jeśli chodzi o lektora, to trzeba dodać że słychać też oryginalne głosy aktorów, tylko dużo ciszej. Taka mieszanka sprawia że to naprawdę nie brzmi źle.
You're right! The fact that after a while you stop hearing the narrator's voice and start hearing the original actors allows you to better appreciate their performance.
that's the point of having lector instead of dubbing. Lector is not supposed to act, or impersonate actors. It's just providing the text so you can focus on original acting.
@@chris.poland Of course it is. Although I forgot that the Stasi agent, Angela Merkel, already stated that the Germans were the first victims of the Nazis from the moon.
@@chris.poland maybe they are blonde too but a little bit more important thing is that they are Germans because 90% Germans were nazis or support them during Second WW. Sad but fact. Powiem Ci coś jeszcze. Nasi polscy dziadkowie niemieckiego języka za dobrze nie znali, ale z czasów wojny nauczyli się dwóch słow: hande hoch.
@@chris.poland Mylisz się, to czemu Niemcy nie mówią, że odszkodowania dostali komuniści a twierdzą że Polska. Punkt widzenia zalezy od punktu siedzenia.
@@Moloxer the same as Chopin, he literally asked her sister before death to bury his heart in Warsaw. And Copernicus literally volunteered during the Teutonic Knights attack on Poland and played an important role, which also shows his attachment to the homeland
Tak a wojny nie wywołali Niemcy tylko naziści. Wojnę wywołali Niemcy,polskie miasta zniszczyli Niemcy. Polaków mordowali Niemcy. Nie było nigdy takiego narodu jak naziści.
Oh man, I have to explain it all on another channel... Please do not listen to "FACTS" about Poland from channels, that are not FROM Poland! Many of those "facts" are mistaken or outdated or oversimplified or just straight up BS (like the pizza one, I don't even have an idea where did this guy get that idea about pizza in Poland.... wtf, we have normal pizza). Marie Curie was not named Marie Curie! Her name was Marie Skłodowska-Curie and she actively fought really hard to be called by her full name, ALWAYS insisting to refer her as Polish woman. She said she really struggled to convince people, because they were not happy, that she is giving her accomplishements to Poland rather than to France. This shit is continuing to this day and it needs to STOP. Even the guy who made the video didn't write her full name! Name is the gratest honor and should be respected, especially when someone of such caliber was fighting so hard for it. Next, kissing woman's hand is not in FASHION, it is more of a relict of the past and only old farts do this. Most women do not like it, and I've never seen a younger than 50 years old man do this. Sadly, śmingus is becoming a thing of the past too, but spanking with branches is a thing of a FAR FAR past, this dude just read some stupid article and didn't even understand it (I know exactly which one). Name day is a thing, but I would never say it is more important than birthday. Everyone celebrates birthday at least somehow, at list little birthday wishes, bur some people do not calebrate name day at all, I don't even remember mine for example. Another thing from the past, with the TV dubbing. Far past. Big movies are always actor dubbed now, some have also versions with lektor. There are 48 Gutenberg Bibles left in the world..... This dude is just so bad at his job, I just can't. His pronounciations are one of the worst I've ever seen any English lector say, like he didn't even bother to at least check the pronounciation with google translate voice, and it is his job. ANOTHER stupid comment about aniconception methods. They are all allowed, only abortion is not and only church is condemning anticonception, but i guess he does it all over the world. This movie is just terrible and I've stated it clearly on many channels. Chris, please forget it, or at least read what I've wrote, thank you.
SOME movies are dubbed- children movies, cartoons, some fantasy/sci-fi/ superhero movies- basically the stuff that is likely to be popular among children/teenagers. Regular movies mostly use lektor which is just our cultural thing at this point, and it's great imo, because watching actual actors speak with someone else's voices (aka dubbing) is straight up nightmare and reading subtitles is tiresome for the eyes.
@@shinji1991 With subtitles you lose a lot of acting and can't pay attention to some small details that matter in certain films or series (e.g. detective stories)
Przyznam, że jestem ciekawy co o Polsce muszą myśleć ludzie z Zachodu, skoro dziwi ich tak wiele normalnych rzeczy w naszym kraju jak to, że mamy noblistów, morskie plaże, średniowieczne zamki, górskie szczyty, a kobiety są atrakcyjnie i ładnie ubrane. Mamy też drogi ekspresowe, elektryczność, a w domach są toalety. Mamy nawet łyżki i widelce. Ciekawe co jeszcze może zaskoczyć zachodniego Europejczyka.
Nie zapominaj , że dominuje szkopski punkt widzenia , gdzie w ogóle to w VI wieku naszej ery Słowianie zeszli z drzew i w 100 lat podbili pół Europy . Od zera do 75 milionów Słowian w 100 lat - króliki uczcie się .
If You are a mathematician, You should read also about so-called "Lwów School of Mathematics" - which was a group of outstanding, famous Polish mathematicians, academics, who worked in the interwar period in Lwów (now: Lviv). Among them were for instance Stefan Banach or Stanisław Ulam. Some of them, like Ulam later for instance participated in the US Manhattan Project, working in Los Alamos on creating the US nuclear bomb.
Jest pierwszą kobietą która zdobyła nagrodę Nobla. Do tej pory jest jedyną osobą która zdobyła nagrodę Nobla w dwóch, różnych dziedzinach nauki. Dostała Nobla z fizyki za odkrycie promieniotwórczości, a z chemii za odkrycie polonu i radu. Była jedną z pierwszych kobiet które uzyskały prawo jazdy.
In 1887, Mickiewicz's drama "Dziady" (Forfather's Eve) was translated into German by Siegfried Lipiner and published under the title "Todtenfeier". Gustav Mahler, the eminent Austrian composer, came to know them in this version. Inspired by this work, Mahler first composes the symphonic poem "Todtenfeier" and then the Resurrection Symphony. In the case of the symphony, the inspiration of Mickiewicz's work mainly concerns its first movement.
About Polish worlwide known scientists, one should also mention for instance Jan Czochralski - he was a Polish chemist who invented so-called Czochralski method, which is used in growing single crystals and in production of semiconductor wafers. His method is still used in over 90 % of all electronics in the world that use semiconductors. He is the most cited Polish scholar (very well known and cited in many countries, in plenty of publications, even in China).
Czochralski developed his method in 1916. In 1954, engineers at Texas Instruments used it to produce the first transistor. Thus begins the road to the age of electronics and computers.
@@arturkranz-dobrowolski2959 Yes, but without his invention it wouldn't be possible at all. The Americans widely applied Czochralski's crystal growth method, which became vital to the whole industry and changed the world. That's why is called The Father of Modern Electronics. He was an outstanding person, ahead of his time. He died in 1953. Today many scientific societies, conferences, contests etc. are named after him.
She was born as Maria Skłodowska, in Polish family in Warsaw, the capital of Poland. She went to France, when she was 24, to study. There she married Pierre Curie. Pierre Curie was a great husband, for example, he did not agree to accept the Nobel Prize alone, for their joint discovery. In the end, they got this Nobel prize together. Pierre fought for Marie to be treated as a full-fledged scientist, not her husband's assistant.
I would also add 100 different interesting facts about Poland, e.g. who invented the walkie talkie?? and hundreds of other things, the ancient history of settlement in Poland 5,000 years ago, Poland as the greatest military power - hussars, Poland which saved Europe from the Turks, Tartars and Mongols, and hundreds of other facts, in general, it is an interesting country with a very difficult language, a rich history that shapes world and an unbreakable, very brave nation closely related to the Vikings, it is said in historians' circles that the first baptized Polish Mieszko was a Viking
the narrator is the best because you can hear the actor and the narrator, you can hear the real emotions of the characters, that's why I hate dubbing and not everyone in Poland knows English
No właśnie błąd! Warszawę nie zniszczyli naziści, nie ma nigdzie i nigdzie nie było języka nazistowskiego. Warszawę zniszczyli Niemcy. Austriacki malarz został kanclerzem Niemiec poprzez legalne wybory! To Niemcy chcieli i byli odpowiedzialni za te zbrodnie.
@@iwonalewanczyk3103no i? Sami Niemcy trafiali do obozów koncentracyjnych jeśli sprzeciwiali się Hitlerowi. Tak samo jak u nas byli Polacy, którzy wydawali Niemcom Żydów w celu osiągnięcia własnych korzyści majątkowych.
@@michaelf1487 O nie nie, to jest właśnie to, czego dzisiejsi Niemcy chcą. To nie przodkowie Polaków czy Portugalczyków rozpętali wojny, tylko Niemców. To na nich ma ciążyć to piętno, nie mogą się od niego odciąć.
The most perfidious thing is that many of the achievements that Poland is owed are attributed to other countries (previously this was mainly the case), e.g. Enigma, and collaboration with the Germans was attributed, while such Belgians, French and Dutch collaborated with the Germans and, most interestingly, little is said about it! Therefore, in my opinion, in terms of how much Poland had to suffer throughout its history, plus the lies that other countries repeat, I believe that we are the most harmed nation, not counting the destruction caused during World War II, everyone ignored us, and we just wanted to be normal and calm lives
@@JacekCzarnomski-cw8ul Masz rację tylko w tym, że Francuski używają pierwsze nazwiska męża a później swoje (panieńskiego). Jednak Maria chciała by jej nazwisko SKŁODOWSKA było pierwsze przed nazwiskiem męża CURIE!! Tak, jak jest w Polsce!!!!!!! Piotr Curie zgodził się na to bo bardzo kochał Marię!!! Cały ówczesny świat wiedział że jest Polką (Einstein, Bohr,i inni wielcy fizycy i chemicy!). Po II wojnie światowej Francja chciała ,aby nie Maria był wynalazcą POLON i RAD !!!! To JEST SKANDAL!!!!!! To WŁAŚNIE MARIA SKŁODOWSKA - ( po mężu Curie prawo do tego że jej nazwisko polskie było przed jego na to wyraził zgodę jej mąż - Francuz!!! ). Jak mogą teraz w UE nauczać że MARIA SKŁODOWSKA - CURIE była francuską!!!!!!😡😡😡😡😡🤬🤬🤬🤬!!!!!! Ogladnij film o MS-C !!!! Polski !!!!! Lub polsko- francuski!!!!!!!! Tam jest PRAWDA!!! Pozdrawiam ❤️❤️❤️
@@JacekCzarnomski-cw8ul A w Polsce pisano Skłodowska Curie. Jeśli według Ciebie ważniejsze jest, jak pisali we Francji, to super. W końcu we Francji kobiety były poniżane dłużej, niż w Polsce, to co w tym dziwnego.
For years, German youth have been taught that the Nazis are to blame for everything, and there were 161 of them (that's how many were sentenced at Nuremberg). And these 161 Nazis intimidated all of Germany, and of course the Germans did not support them. The bombing in 1939 only partially destroyed Warsaw, most of the buildings were blown up by the Germans (probably the 161 Nazis) after the Warsaw Uprising, deliberately planting explosives, tenement house after tenement house.
@@sabor995 soviets. Remember that USSR consisted of Russians and many other nations. Ukrainians, Belarusians,.... It was Soviet Union not Russian Union.
W kalendarzu jest napisane że mężczyźni z imieniem Krystian mają imienniny 4 grudnia, ale także mogą 18 marca, ale tego już nie ma napisane. W zależności kiedy masz urodziny to najbliższy dzień który obchodzi twoje imię, staje się dniem twoich imienin.
Fun fact about Maria Sklodowska Curie's beef stew recipe: If you want to look at her "secret" recipe, you need to go to Switzerland, pay for the entrance to one of the vaults where her cookbook is stored, and put on a hazmat suit since her cookbook is radioactive. I think she went the extra mile to make sure that her stew recipe remained really secret. Yeah, yeah, she was Polish.
I love Polish nature! Polish mountains are beautiful! These are the Crown of Polish Mountains - 28 peaks in their 28 :-)ranges: Łysica 614 m n.p.m. - Góry Świętokrzyskie Ślęża 718 m n.p.m. - Masyw Ślęży Skopiec 724 m n.p.m. - Góry Kaczawskie Kłodzka Góra 765 m n.p.m. - Góry Bardzkie Chełmiec 869 m n.p.m. - Góry Wałbrzyskie Biskupia Kopa 889 m n.p.m. - Góry Opawskie Lubomir 912 m n.p.m. - Beskid Makowski Szczeliniec Wielki 919 m n.p.m. - Góry Stołowe Czupel 934 m n.p.m. - Beskid Mały Waligóra 936 m n.p.m. - Góry Kamienne Skalnik 945 m n.p.m. - Rudawy Janowickie Jagodna 977 m n.p.m. - Góry Bystrzyckie Kowadło 989 m n.p.m. - Góry Złote Lackowa 997 m n.p.m. - Beskid Niski Wielka Sowa 1015 m n.p.m. - Góry Sowie Wysoka 1050 m n.p.m. - Pieniny Orlica 1084 m n.p.m. - Góry Orlickie Rudawiec 1112 m n.p.m. - Góry Bialskie Wysoka Kopa 1126 m n.p.m. - Góry Izerskie Mogielica 1173 m n.p.m. - Beskid Wyspowy Skrzyczne 1257 m n.p.m. - Beskid Śląski Radziejowa 1262 m n.p.m. - Beskid Sądecki Turbacz 1310 m n.p.m. - Gorce Tarnica 1346 m n.p.m. - Bieszczady Śnieżnik 1425 m n.p.m. - Masyw Śnieżnika Śnieżka 1602 m n.p.m. - Karkonosze Babia Góra 1725 m n.p.m. - Beskid Żywiecki Rysy 2499 m n.p.m. - Tatry :-)
@@michakozowski8726 :) U mnie w Słowniczku ortograficznym Jodłowskiego i Taszyckiego jest z wielkiej. W internetowym także znalazłam: cyt: Nazwy geograficzne i miejscowe (regiony, krainy, miasta, góry, rzeki itp.) - Wszystkie człony nazw geograficznych i miejscowych (regionów, krain, miast, gór, rzek itp.), z wyjątkiem przyimków, piszemy wielką literą. Nazwy gór i łańcuchów górskich zapisujemy od wielkiej litery. Na przykład: Tatry, Alpy, Wzgórza Czekoladowe, Babia Góra, Kasprowy Wierch, Gubałówka. /koniec cytatu/ Tak też zapamiętałam to ze szkoły. Może u Ciebie inaczej uczyli, nie oceniam, pozdrawiam!
Kissing womans hand is not in fashion but still happens among the older high educated generation . I remember after my master"s thesis defence every committee member kissed my hand to show their respect. It was little embrassing but nice.
Interestingly, a city 140 km away from Warsaw was barely touched. Łódź, the city I'm talking about, was cosidered up to German standards. The city before the war housed four cultures (Polish, Jewish, German and Russian) and Germans who came there influenced the growth of the city immensly. Because of that there was also a big Volskdeutsch community. Funnily enough some buildings in Łódź had to be taken apart to rebuild Warsaw.
Wrocław was heavily damaged by the Russian attack and the senseless German resistance, which had no chance of success. Germany declared Wrocław a fortress (Festung Breslau). Breslau defended until May 6. Breslau continued to defend even after Hitler's death (April 20) and after Berlin's capitulation (May 2). More can be found under Festung Breslau.
Wroclaw has been rebuild after World war 2 nearly clompletely like it looks before the war. On the market square there is an exhibition of Photos before the war, after the war ( all destroyed ) and now. It is very impressing, how beautiful Poland rebuild this town after the war - Chapeau. In Germany most old towns were not rebuild , the have build new houses in the style quadratic - practicable - good and it's looking ugly.
The 'Polish dubbing' thing is a very wrong way of looking at it. It's not 'very bad dub', it's 'great subtitles that read themselves!' It stems from waaaay back when, from the time of small CRT TVs, analogue signal and low resolution. At the same time, small country that does not produce enough content to fill the whole lineup with native programming so you have to get some foreign stuff and that gives you a dilemma; either dub it or subtitle it. Dubing a lot of content takes a lot of money and time. Subtitles would not be visible on crappy old TVs. So... Have someone read the subtitles in a monotone and unobtrusive way. Presto! Polish 'lektor'. And we got so used to it that whenever you come across something actually dubbed on the telly, you switch the channel, cause "it must be something for kids or teens" (those did get dubbed way back when). And yes, now that we can afford a proper dub we DO NOT WANT IT! 😁
Eeeh ? It's the most boomer thing I ever read. True, lector is better than subtitles, but it's much worse than dubbing. Learning english amazing thing, it's allow you to fully enjoy movies with english dubbing, hear emotions and know with movie is shit and with one is amazing. Nowadays most of the movies are total shit, actors do no work and dubbing would be better, but there are tones of Gret movies better with dubbing, part of them not even in native dubbing, Shrek show great voice work.
@@Darwidx so you're not for dubbed movies, you're just "against movies". You know you can watch some older, non-shit stuff too, right? Also, some good stuff still does get made. Just don't go for block busters.
If we talking about Marie Skłodowska-Curie and Pierre Curie, after discovering they named Polonium by the name of Poland, that didn’t exist as independent state at the time.
You are wrong. When the narrator reads the text, you can hear the actor's natural voices. Poles don't want dubbing. When I was in Germany, I couldn't watch movies because of the terrible dubbing.
Halloween is NOT a new thing, it is based on an old tradition, like most such things. Halloween's origins can be traced back to the ancient (at least about 2 thousand years ago) Celtic festival known as Samhain, which was held on November 1 in contemporary calendars (or according to rather sources: on the night of October 31). It was believed that on that day, the souls of the dead returned to their homes, so people dressed in costumes and lit bonfires to ward off spirits. In later centuries, people began dressing as ghosts, demons, and other malevolent creatures, performing antics in exchange for food and drink. This custom, known as mumming, dates back to the Middle Ages and is thought to be an antecedent of trick-or-treating. (source: History com, "How Trick-or-Treating Became a Halloween Tradition")
Chris, you are a very likeable young man, but we should stick to the facts. You say 3:04, but Poland was attacked by Germany, not "Nazists". There was no country called "Naziland", nor did the attackers speak "Nazish". There attackers did not sing the anthem of Naziland here, the death camps were owned by a certain state and the proceeds went to a certain state and it was not Naziland. This is a sensetive issue in Poland.
I always hear it wasn't the Nazis, it was the Germans. Guess what, it was both, because the Nazis were in command and the Nazis (at least most of them) were Germans. But what is always implied with the statement is that the Germans all wanted it that way and that is wrong, many Russians don't want war with Ukraine now either, but you see what happens with critics like Navalny. What Germans wanted at the time were secure jobs, a stable government and a stable currency and a man who would show them the way in such an uncertain time. However, very few people wanted the direction he showed them, but by then it was already too late, which is always the case in a dictatorship. When times are uncertain, people like to vote for extremes (especially right-wingers) because they have simple solutions, like back then the Jews and non-Aryans were the culprits and today it's the foreigners who only live in our country at state expense or the Germans who brought foreigners to Europe and now don't want to bother about it.
@@chris.poland Dear Chris, this is a never ending discussion and I'm afraid you'll be getting this kind of comments with every video, because even if you answer some people now, there always will be new ones who'll see a video and react to that. In short, there were times when Poles didn't care about whether those were the Nazis or Germans or Nazi camps or Polish camps (seeing it as only depiction of the territory and politics, and not the national ownership of the camps). That all ended some 20 years ago when it was discovered that so much time had passed, and the history lessons all over the world are so bad, that children asked in surveys "Who were the Nazis" chose the answer "Poles", and it turned out that was because of using the name "Polish camps". Then people looked even closer, and it turned out that even Dachau and Buchenwald are sometimes called "Polish camps" because who cares about geography. It's even more confusing with the territories that are in Poland now but weren't during WW2. I.e. Auschwitz wasn't built in Poland. It was built in Germany, in the territories that were officially annexed to the Reich while all Poles living there were expelled, and most Polish Jews never saw Auschwitz. On the other hand, camps like Majdanek or Treblinka were built in the occupied Poland, and that's where the Polish Jews died. Since then Poles are allergic to the word Nazi being used separately from any nationality, and a huge diplomatic action was taken to convince media and institutions all over the world to change their language. So if you want to avoid the never ending comments but at the same time don't want to blame all the Germans, I'd suggest using the names Nazi Germany and Nazi Germans, or even Nazi Germans and their allies since we know those weren't only Germans. Or just add a relevant caption in your vids to end the subject. Trust me, once you'll get through this point it'll get easier.
@@sylwia1410 I hope in the future I have a strong viewership with a strong voice that they attack such comments before I have to do 😊. You are very free to copy and paste my earlier answers under them 😊
@@chris.poland Sylwia has just expanded on my comment , and I fully agree with her explanation. How come then that you agree with her and attack what I have written? Or have I misunderstood something bacause i didn't even think that you attacked my comment- I thought it was just your viewpoint. 🤔 Do you know why Jewish young genereation hates Poles and sees us rather than German as the WWII "bad guys" - because according to the narratiive , their ancestors died in "nazi Polish capms" ! For them it's the Poles who run the business there, they don' even know that the first transports of prisoners were 100% Poles and that milions of Poles died during this war just like the Jews, nor that there was no Poland on the maps during WWII. By the way, as a child I neighoured a Polish survivor of Auschwitz and visited him untill 2020 when he passed away .He shared with me lots of stories you can't find im books and films.
Until 1945, the Germans very often omitted the name Polonium when creating the Periodic Table of the Elements, also at universities, leaving the box for this element unnamed.
I lived in 12 countries and saw nobody understand this. So I know that idea of lector in polish tv is hard to understand. But the truth is that you STOP HEARING (really we don't hear him) a lector after 10 minutes and you sill can hear the original version of the movie - but you can understand it. I know is hard to belive but is like a magic😂 This is one of the reason why Polish people are speaking so good English. Because we HEARING A ORGINAL english in every movie... and even without understand other language we understand the meaning... magic😅
Sometimes, people from Poland get very VERRRYYY upset when someone calls Maria Skłodowska Curie "Marie Curie", probably because Curie was her husband's last name, and they prefer to hear M A R I A and S K L O D O W S K A. Personally, as a proud female of Poland, I believe it isn't 'offensive' like some say, It's just not accurate since we all know the name 'Maria' exist. ALTHOUGH, I'm not offended when someone says Marie Curie. I only get a bit sad when they say Marie Curie is from France, when she clearly isn't. And the famous Polon is named after the beloved country she belongs to, anyway. This video was very interesting, and I hope that the whole world will know once and for all that at least she was from Poland. Thank you for reading, sorry if there are any mistakes, have a wonderful day and stay safe!!
Kupała's night, is mainly celebrating in Polish small towns and villages on 21-22 June (still practiced in Masovia, Podlasie, Lubelszczyzna) It is an event combined with a big bonfire (with herbs) and dancing. Single women weave wreaths and then send them down the river. Then, single men must catch them. Exist superstition, that if a women wreath will be lost or damaged, she will be single forever (stara panna). After catching floating wreaths, young lovers going to the forest to find the legend 'fern flowers'. Also at the east of Poland (close to the border with Belarus), we have unique and very old tradition cold "Brodacze ze Sławatycz". Men are dress out for colorful costumes made by themselves. At the tree last days of the year, they scream, jump, run on the main streets and scare people, for away everything evil. All of this to make next year better.
Polish lector is not because of shortage of money to hire more actors. It's just a tradition in Poland, and if one gets used to it, it's actually even better than dubbing. Because You can hear a bit of the original voices, while he is reading. And the people chosen to work as lectors have really good, characteristic voices, that are remembered later for years or decades (everyone knows in Poland some of these voices). I personally hate dubbing and cannot watch movies with dubbing. If it's dubbing, I choose original version with subtitles (even if it's Chinese or Japanese etc.).
Piwnica Świdnicka in Wrocław was created in 13th century and it was serving beer from my home town Świdnica. There were several "pubs" like this all over europe. Świdnica beers were one of the best in those times.
The "beer war" broke out in Wrocław. The city allows the sale beer from Świdnica only in Piwnica Świdnicka, but the church broke this restriction, which led to the war.
No i jeszcze, że najstarszy bumerang z Jaskini obłazowej ma ca 28000 lat, że Waza z Bronocic to najstarszy na świecie wizerunek wozu kołowego zaprzęgowego, i że na Kujawach znaleziono gliniane durszlaki z pozostałościami sera sprzed 8000 lat. No i że Krzysztof Kolumb był synem Władysława III Warneńczyka, jak donosi po 20 latach szperania dr Manuel Rosa z Portugalii.
Inuru is an innovative and first and only startup in the world that specializes in printing light using OLED technology. Founded by Marcin Ratajczak and Patryk Barkowski, who opened a new factory in Berlin. Firma Inuru, to innowacyjny i jedyny taki startup na świecie, który specjalizuje się w drukowaniu światła dzięki technologii oled. Założony przez Marcina Ratajczaka i Patryka Barkowskiego, którzy otworzyli nową fabrykę w Berlinie.
I actually like the lector 😅 I prefer it because I can still hear the original sound and it's so subliminal that I stop thinking about him in a few minutes 😁 just understand movies from even more exotic countries like South Corea still hearing how it sounds in original 👌 😄
About celebrating namedays and birthdays, its sometimes a weird topic since in some parts of Poland people only celebrate namedays, in other parts only birthdays and in others both. Me for instance I live and was born in Śląsk. Most people here only celebrate birthday. But my Grandpa who was born and lived most of his live in Białystok only celebrates namedays. We still have calendars with names for each day tho.
I like lector more than dubbing. Why? Because dubbing will never cover actors' mouth moves perfectly. So it is a bit uncomfortable to watch. When you hear lector and original voices in the background, that sounds more natural. Also lector tries to express with his voice the emotions specific to each character in the movie. Not everyone can be a lector. It is almost an art.
I believe that Polish TV voice-over has more advantages than typical dubbing, where each actor has a voice in a given language. This way you listen to the original language of the film and at the same time hear what it means. This is how I learned English by watching films, most often in English. I don't speak it perfectly, but I speak it well enough that I can communicate in it. And what's most interesting. I understand much more than I say, but that's only due to grammar deficiencies, etc. However, for many years I have been watching films on YT or elsewhere in English, without subtitles in Polish. Moreover, the dubbing (not only Polish, but also German, probably others as well) is terribly artificial. Only in children's films does Polish dubbing sound good. Perhaps because a lot more effort and work is put into it to make it sound good. Best regards. :)
Movies on Polish TV are NOT DUBBED. Dubbing is the entire replacement of original actors' voices. In Poland, the original voices (English, French, German, Italian etc.) are dimly audible. It's just that one guy reads all the parts over those original voices.
I like the etymology of the world Poland: In antiquity Poland was known as Lachia. Later in Middle Ages Poles where called po-Lachy (after-Lachy). Lachy- inhabitants of Lachia.
Możecie ludzie wyluzować troche w komentarzach? Chcemy żeby obcokrajowcy mieli o nas opinie jako dumny, inteligentny naród czy zakompleksiony, cienko-skóry naród?
Niemcy właśnie mają się za inteligentniejszych od innych, a nie mają ku temu żadnych podstaw. Jeśli zachód jest taki wspaniały, to może mi wyjaśnisz dlaczego rodowici Francuzi i Niemcy nie czują się bezpiecznie na swoich ulicach?
True. However they were under control of the National Socialist government. You know, same as how we weren't invaded by Russians in 1920, but Soviets, soldiers of who were of many nationalities. Same how we were invaded in 1939 by Stalin, not by Russians/Ukrainians/Georgians/Azerbaijani's. It is worth focusing on who gave the orders. It's always who should be the most responsible.
Szkoda że nie powiedział że Enigmę rozszyfrowali polscy matematycy było ich trzech i dali swoim sojusznikom Angliką a oni tego na świat nie prostują tylko się chwalą że to oni .Królowa Elżbieta jak była w Polsce to przeprosiła za to Polaków .Szkoda że ,,na ucho,,, a nie na cały świat. Nie ładnie oj nieładnie
I know that I'd said that before... but I love your videos! :D First of all, many nations take credit for Polish people achievements, Maria Curie-Skłodowska (FR), deciphering the Enigma code (UK) and so on... (we are used to it - I can only speak for myself, but I believe, that true will always come out at the end, so I don't care). Malbork was built by the Teutonic Order, so it's actually a German achievement, not Polish :) Voice-overs in films are a totally different story... When you hear the narrator, you also hear the actors' statements in the original version, so you learn the language faster - it's not a matter of saving money, but of getting the viewers familiar with a foreign languages. If you like it or not, finally you understand other languages without knowing them - so I think it's really clever :)
Nowadays on many TV channels you can switch between oryginal and dubbed-by-one-person audio nad turn on/off subtitles. The same on streaming platforms. But full dubbing is reserved for cartoons and films for children.
And I have to admit that mushrooming is polish national sport. I live near forest and it is funny to see people having picking competition in season. People can go to forest at 5am to be first and if you go for example at 9am you will find nothing since every single square of the forest was already scanned by fanatical pickers.
About lektor thing is that poles are so much used to it that if for instant i hear dubbing i changing on original sound with subtitles or just turn it off. I can't stand dubbing except for animations. Imagine that you have watched LOTR like 20 times, you know exactly voice of every single charakter and now you hear dubbing with some strange voices acting poorly ... disgusting.
Also bist du nicht ein Pole und ein Mann gleichzeitig. Krass, dass man nicht zwei Sachen gleichzeitig sein kann, gut, dass du mir das beigebracht hast. Wir nutzen in Deutschland den Term Nazis damit jeder sofort weiß von welcher Zeit wir reden.
@@grash4435 Obviously anyone who calls them Nazis instead of Germans (as they proudly called themselves) doesn't have a clue, and needs to be corrected. Don't want to be corrected? Then start calling them GERMANS. End of story.
@@chris.polandmówcie po prostu Niemcy, a nie naziści. Niemcy rozpętali II wojnę światową, Niemcy pomordowali miliony ludzi, Niemcy stworzyli obozy koncentracyjne i mordowali tam masowo ludzi, Niemcy zniszczyli Warszawę itd. To takie trudne? Kto wybrał tych nazistów w legalnych i demokratycznych wyborach? No chyba nie Chińczycy? Niemcy ich wybrali i popierali czerpiąc ogromne zyski z rozpętania wojny, okupacji innych krajów, grabieży dóbr i mienia innych narodów. Doczytaj, trochę się dowiedz więcej. Nikt przecież Ciebie człowieku nie wini za to co zrobili twoi rodacy 80 lat temu - to byłoby bezsensu. Natomiast będziemy Ci wytykać że tego nie wiesz i palisz głupa. Nie dziw. Nasi rodacy zostali mordowani. Niemalże każdy w Polsce ma kogoś kogo zabili Niemcy w czasie okupacji. Więc żartów nie ma. Na dodatek dodam, że obecnie Niemcy bardzo chętnie używają słowa Naziści, aby niejako odepchnąć od siebie odpowiedzialność za II wojnę światową. Ale spokojnie, macie obok Polaków którzy przy każdej okazji będą Wam o tym przypominam tak żebyście przypadkiem o tym nie zapomnieli. Gorące pozdrowienia🫡
If you thought Maria Skłodowska-Curie was French, you probably think Joseph Conrad was English. Well, Conrad ethnically was 100% Polish and his original name was Jozef Teodor Konrad Korzeniowski coat of arms Nałęcz. The same goes for the great French poet, Apoliner. His Polish name was Apolinary Kostrowicki. And how about the Germans? Well, Friedrich Nietzsche insisted that he had Polish roots, that his lineage descended from a family of Polish nobility with the surname Nicki. This can only be a myth. What is not a myth, on the other hand, is that Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz's roots lie in a Polish Arian family with the surname Lubieniecki. An interesting figure is the eminent surgeon Jan Mikulicz-Radecki, known in Germany as Johann Freiherr von Mikulicz-Radecki. His parental ancestors of the Mikulicz family were of Polish szlachta origin and had been granted the Gozdawa coat of arms by King John III Sobieski after the 1683 Battle of Vienna. His mother Emilie Freiin von Damnitz was of Austrian descent. When asked his nationality he simply answered "surgeon". The maiden name of Gottlob Frege's mother was Blaloblotzky. In the Polish orthography Białobłocki. It is a purely Polish surname with the meaning: coming from the white marshes. One final comment. First let me ask, do you have a fridge? If so, mention Kraków on 29 March. On 29 March 1883, oxygen was liquefied in Krakow, followed a few days later by nitrogen and carbon monoxide. This was done by two professors from the Jagiellonian University: Zygmunt Wróblewski (physicist) and Karol Olszewski (chemist). In doing so, they opened the way to low-temperature technology.
Haha It's quite obvious that Nietzsche claimed to be Polish to troll the early German nationalists. Schopenhauer, on the other hand, had family tradition deeply rooted in the Royal Prussia. The partition of Poland and annexing of the territories by Prussia was for his family a personal tragedy.
@@sylwia1410 As for Nietzsche, you are probably right. However, it is puzzling that his sister, with close ties to the Nazis, never denied her brother's claim of their Polish ancestry. And yet it seems that in her own interest she should have done so.
@@arturkranz-dobrowolski2959 As much as Nazis saw Poles as subhumans, they still saw the European aristocracy as super humans, so perhaps she simply liked the claim of noble blood. Or she didn't take the claim seriously, or was too busy rewriting Nietzsche's works.
Her surname was Maria Sklodowska and Curie came just after her husband Pirre Curie and correctly she is Maria Sklodowska-Curie because in Poland the surname after huasband came always as a secondary.
We are used to the lektor, I tend to prefer it over dubbing. We don't know name days in general, there are some popular that everybody knows about, but not most
7:20 "Śmingus Dyngus" Muszę to zwerfikować.Ten piękny zwyczaj ,można by powiedzieć, praktycznie zanikł i to już kilkadziesiąt lat temu.A był to piękny zwyczaj,młodzi chłopcy czychali na młode dziewczyny z wiadrami,sikawkami z wodą i je oblewali,Chodziło o to żeby jak najwięcej dziewczyn oblać.Z kolei dziewczyna która była najczęściej oblewana miała większe powodzenie u chłopaków.Nawet zdarzało się tak że oblana dziewczyna,poszła do domu żeby się przebrać,by po chwili wróćić żeby być znowu oblaną.Ten zwyczaj zanikł,z prostego powodu...ucywilizowania naszego kraju...po prostu nikt już nie chce być oblanym na ulicy.
Nie zanikł, bo dzieci nadal wychodzą na dwór i ganiają się z pistoletami na wodę. Nie jest to już może tak powszechne i popularne (szczególnie, że klimat się zmienił, więc często jest na to po prostu za zimno), ale nadal można się z tym zwyczajem spotkać. Zmienił się tylko jego kontekst. ;-)
Zmiany nazwiska są tak jak na przykładzie nazwiska Kowalski. In Polen the nicknames they change depending on the ending it's usually mainly the ending for the men is "i" for the womens "a" becouse it depends on the gender. YOU WELCOME😘😘
It's NOT debatable. Only Poland has written documentation of the production of vodka under that name since Medieval Ages. Corporate marketing fantasies, just like Russian, Sweidish or Finnish egos, count for nothing when it comes to easily verifiable historical facts, so stop spreading nonsense.
@@pythagorasnineDocumentation is usually not needed (eg Beer and Wine have been proven to have been invented long before the processes were documented), and if the spirit needs to be called the same everywhere then Sweden didn't invent it until the 90ies, it has always been called "brännvin" (burnt, or distilled, Wine) here
@@pythagorasnineI did a tiny bit of research, and it seems like Vodka was invented in Russia and Poland at about the same time, and called Voda and Woda respectivly. It's fair to suspect that it was the Rus or Varangians, ie the Swedish Vikings who came up with it. However, as per usual, the Chinese were first. They disdtilled clear liquor from grain about 1000 years earlier
You treat "Polish lector" like a "foreground background". You can still hear the original (Stallone's, Sharzenegger's, Weaver's, Johansson's voice) roles. Let's say it's just a Siri translating your movie. ; ] Actually i hat Dubbing, but I love voice-over!
I find it to be incredibly shameful that the custom of kissing a woman's hand is disappearing. It's all about chivalry and stuff. But that also seems to be disappearing. I wonder when women will open the door for men...
Wrocław, Gdańsk, and Warsaw were completely destroyed during ww2 (especially the historical parts of the cities). Kraków was the only major Polish city that wasn't completely ruined during ww2 altough it was still damaged during the fight and bombing.
First atacked city by Germans in WWII was WIELUN (in central Poland) not GDANSK (DANZIG) but division of Westerplatte was fight 7 days having an ammo for only few hours AND yes we have desert - its BLEDOWSKA desert :) The next place of the brave Polish fight is Wizna (a small village in the Podlaskie Voivodeship on the road from Łomża to Białystok). Only 700 Polish soldiers fought for 3 days against over 40,000 Nazi soldiers with the support of tanks and the Luftwaffe.
Skłodowska nazwała Polon z powodu nazwy swojego kraju, Polski.
A potem sie nim napromieniowała i umarła.
@wojstube9359 Coś podobnego!! Szok i niedowierzanie!!
okej ale po angielsku może? Chłop jest niemcem.
potem to nogi smierdza, Putin tym ludzi promieniuje zeby promieniowac wsrod tumanow rosyjskich klakierow@@kaes2000
@@ReallyMapping Bedauerlicherweise Englisch ist mir ganz entflossen irgendwie im Moment, was tut mir äußerst schrecklich Leid..
Maria Skłodowska Curie was actually Polish! The two elements she discovered, were named after being proud of Poland. "Polon" is named after Poland, and "Radium" is "Rad" in Polish, which actually means Happy 😊
Nope, radium means ray in Latin
Łukasiewicz not only invented naft lamp , but whole oil rafinery process in petrochemic industry which its used in all world and still upgraded in last decades
Liczy się pomysł co to ma być i jak działać ciołku. Zazdrość przez ciebie przemawia
@@SylwiaJastrzębska-x9k jaki masz problem
Regarding lektor- it's hard to explain, but after a while you stop hearing the lektor and start hearing actor's real voices in the background. Your brain quickly adjusts to it and I love watching movies with lektor, it's one of the concepts that you really have to try to understand because when you just think about it, it doesn't make any sense.
Jeśli chodzi o lektora, to trzeba dodać że słychać też oryginalne głosy aktorów, tylko dużo ciszej. Taka mieszanka sprawia że to naprawdę nie brzmi źle.
przecież to napisał@@hubik9847
Ja również lubię tego lektora, pomógł mi w nauce j. angielskiego, filmy z wieloma lektorami, są takie nie prawdziwe
You're right! The fact that after a while you stop hearing the narrator's voice and start hearing the original actors allows you to better appreciate their performance.
that's the point of having lector instead of dubbing. Lector is not supposed to act, or impersonate actors. It's just providing the text so you can focus on original acting.
In Poland we say, that our cities were bombed by GERMANS, not some nazis . There was not such a country like ,,Naziland".
It’s okay, if you are cool, that we call them Nazis because the Germans in command to bomb Poland were Nazis 😊👍
@@chris.poland Of course it is. Although I forgot that the Stasi agent, Angela Merkel, already stated that the Germans were the first victims of the Nazis from the moon.
@@chris.poland maybe they are blonde too but a little bit more important thing is that they are Germans because 90% Germans were nazis or support them during Second WW. Sad but fact. Powiem Ci coś jeszcze. Nasi polscy dziadkowie niemieckiego języka za dobrze nie znali, ale z czasów wojny nauczyli się dwóch słow: hande hoch.
@@chris.poland Mylisz się, to czemu Niemcy nie mówią, że odszkodowania dostali komuniści a twierdzą że Polska. Punkt widzenia zalezy od punktu siedzenia.
To jest niemiecka koncepcja zbywania odpowiedzialności za 2 W na mitycznych nazistów
I heard that both Maria Skłodowska-Curie and Chopin are considered French in Germany. Is that true? Both were Polish and grew up in Warsaw.
same as Kopernik
yeah but most importantly Maria wanted to be known specifically for being a Polish female scientist, but the French still don't honor her wish
@@Moloxer the same as Chopin, he literally asked her sister before death to bury his heart in Warsaw. And Copernicus literally volunteered during the Teutonic Knights attack on Poland and played an important role, which also shows his attachment to the homeland
Tak a wojny nie wywołali Niemcy tylko naziści.
Wojnę wywołali Niemcy,polskie miasta zniszczyli Niemcy. Polaków mordowali Niemcy. Nie było nigdy takiego narodu jak naziści.
@@Moloxerwhere tf did she explicitly state it
Oh man, I have to explain it all on another channel... Please do not listen to "FACTS" about Poland from channels, that are not FROM Poland! Many of those "facts" are mistaken or outdated or oversimplified or just straight up BS (like the pizza one, I don't even have an idea where did this guy get that idea about pizza in Poland.... wtf, we have normal pizza). Marie Curie was not named Marie Curie! Her name was Marie Skłodowska-Curie and she actively fought really hard to be called by her full name, ALWAYS insisting to refer her as Polish woman. She said she really struggled to convince people, because they were not happy, that she is giving her accomplishements to Poland rather than to France. This shit is continuing to this day and it needs to STOP. Even the guy who made the video didn't write her full name! Name is the gratest honor and should be respected, especially when someone of such caliber was fighting so hard for it. Next, kissing woman's hand is not in FASHION, it is more of a relict of the past and only old farts do this. Most women do not like it, and I've never seen a younger than 50 years old man do this. Sadly, śmingus is becoming a thing of the past too, but spanking with branches is a thing of a FAR FAR past, this dude just read some stupid article and didn't even understand it (I know exactly which one). Name day is a thing, but I would never say it is more important than birthday. Everyone celebrates birthday at least somehow, at list little birthday wishes, bur some people do not calebrate name day at all, I don't even remember mine for example. Another thing from the past, with the TV dubbing. Far past. Big movies are always actor dubbed now, some have also versions with lektor. There are 48 Gutenberg Bibles left in the world..... This dude is just so bad at his job, I just can't. His pronounciations are one of the worst I've ever seen any English lector say, like he didn't even bother to at least check the pronounciation with google translate voice, and it is his job. ANOTHER stupid comment about aniconception methods. They are all allowed, only abortion is not and only church is condemning anticonception, but i guess he does it all over the world. This movie is just terrible and I've stated it clearly on many channels. Chris, please forget it, or at least read what I've wrote, thank you.
Dubbed movies? Do you mean children movies? Movies for adults are all with lektor when in TV or with subs in cinema.
Dune is chindren movie? 😅
@@sylwia1410 only the old movies
Gosh, you polish people must be fun at parties
… Not
SOME movies are dubbed- children movies, cartoons, some fantasy/sci-fi/ superhero movies- basically the stuff that is likely to be popular among children/teenagers. Regular movies mostly use lektor which is just our cultural thing at this point, and it's great imo, because watching actual actors speak with someone else's voices (aka dubbing) is straight up nightmare and reading subtitles is tiresome for the eyes.
I love lector because it allows me to hear the actors' original voices
Aren't subtitles the way to do so?
@@shinji1991 With subtitles you lose a lot of acting and can't pay attention to some small details that matter in certain films or series (e.g. detective stories)
@@Lola_in_the_Blackyou learn to read faster with subs, and understand other language better
Przyznam, że jestem ciekawy co o Polsce muszą myśleć ludzie z Zachodu, skoro dziwi ich tak wiele normalnych rzeczy w naszym kraju jak to, że mamy noblistów, morskie plaże, średniowieczne zamki, górskie szczyty, a kobiety są atrakcyjnie i ładnie ubrane. Mamy też drogi ekspresowe, elektryczność, a w domach są toalety. Mamy nawet łyżki i widelce. Ciekawe co jeszcze może zaskoczyć zachodniego Europejczyka.
Nie zapominaj , że dominuje szkopski punkt widzenia , gdzie w ogóle to w VI wieku naszej ery Słowianie zeszli z drzew i w 100 lat podbili pół Europy . Od zera do 75 milionów Słowian w 100 lat - króliki uczcie się .
Gdyby Maria S C nie wyjechała z Polski, to żadnego Nobla by nie dostała więc nazywanie jej polskim noblistą jest lekko naciągane
@@mikolajpodbielski Nie wyjechała z Polski, bo wtedy nie było Polski.
@@mikolajpodbielski
pitolisz dziubdziusiu
@@mikolajpodbielski Ale była polka z urodzenia i oficjalnie jest polska noblistka
If You are a mathematician, You should read also about so-called "Lwów School of Mathematics" - which was a group of outstanding, famous Polish mathematicians, academics, who worked in the interwar period in Lwów (now: Lviv). Among them were for instance Stefan Banach or Stanisław Ulam. Some of them, like Ulam later for instance participated in the US Manhattan Project, working in Los Alamos on creating the US nuclear bomb.
Jest pierwszą kobietą która zdobyła nagrodę Nobla. Do tej pory jest jedyną osobą która zdobyła nagrodę Nobla w dwóch, różnych dziedzinach nauki. Dostała Nobla z fizyki za odkrycie promieniotwórczości, a z chemii za odkrycie polonu i radu. Była jedną z pierwszych kobiet które uzyskały prawo jazdy.
No niekoniecznie. Linus Pauling został nagrodzony 2 razy. W dziedzinie chemii i pokojową Nagrodą Nobla.
In old Poland, Dziady was celebrated, not Halloween. Mickiewicz even wrote a book about this holiday
In 1887, Mickiewicz's drama "Dziady" (Forfather's Eve) was translated into German by Siegfried Lipiner and published under the title "Todtenfeier". Gustav Mahler, the eminent Austrian composer, came to know them in this version. Inspired by this work, Mahler first composes the symphonic poem "Todtenfeier" and then the Resurrection Symphony. In the case of the symphony, the inspiration of Mickiewicz's work mainly concerns its first movement.
Mickiewicz nie był Polakiem
@@JacekCzarnomski-cw8ul Fakt, był Masajem albo Eskimosem.
Łukasiewicz invented not only kerosine lamp, but also made first oil pump and raffinery
About Polish worlwide known scientists, one should also mention for instance Jan Czochralski - he was a Polish chemist who invented so-called Czochralski method, which is used in growing single crystals and in production of semiconductor wafers. His method is still used in over 90 % of all electronics in the world that use semiconductors. He is the most cited Polish scholar (very well known and cited in many countries, in plenty of publications, even in China).
Czochralski developed his method in 1916. In 1954, engineers at Texas Instruments used it to produce the first transistor. Thus begins the road to the age of electronics and computers.
@@arturkranz-dobrowolski2959 Yes, but without his invention it wouldn't be possible at all. The Americans widely applied Czochralski's crystal growth method, which became vital to the whole industry and changed the world. That's why is called The Father of Modern Electronics. He was an outstanding person, ahead of his time. He died in 1953. Today many scientific societies, conferences, contests etc. are named after him.
She was born as Maria Skłodowska,
in Polish family in Warsaw, the capital of Poland.
She went to France, when she was 24, to study.
There she married Pierre Curie.
Pierre Curie was a great husband, for example, he did not agree to accept the Nobel Prize alone, for their joint discovery. In the end, they got this Nobel prize together.
Pierre fought for Marie to be treated as a full-fledged scientist, not her husband's assistant.
And the second Nobel prize she received on her own (it was already after Pierre Curie death).
I have lived in the US for 42 years, and I still miss lektor. I HATE watching dubbed foreign movies.
I also hate dubbing in films, but there is one exeption-Shrek with Polish dubbing. 😅
@@michaelf1487 polish dubbing in Shrek is superb. In fact, that's true about polish dubbing in animated movies in general.
Asterix Obelix misja Kleopatra ma zawalisty dubbing też!
8:30 actually lector is much better than dubbing. You can still hear actors real voices in the background, and that sounds much more natural.
I would also add 100 different interesting facts about Poland, e.g. who invented the walkie talkie?? and hundreds of other things, the ancient history of settlement in Poland 5,000 years ago, Poland as the greatest military power - hussars, Poland which saved Europe from the Turks, Tartars and Mongols, and hundreds of other facts, in general, it is an interesting country with a very difficult language, a rich history that shapes world and an unbreakable, very brave nation closely related to the Vikings, it is said in historians' circles that the first baptized Polish Mieszko was a Viking
the narrator is the best because you can hear the actor and the narrator, you can hear the real emotions of the characters, that's why I hate dubbing and not everyone in Poland knows English
Bulletproof vest was also invented in Poland, walkie talkie as well :D
And windscreen wipers.
No właśnie błąd! Warszawę nie zniszczyli naziści, nie ma nigdzie i nigdzie nie było języka nazistowskiego. Warszawę zniszczyli Niemcy. Austriacki malarz został kanclerzem Niemiec poprzez legalne wybory! To Niemcy chcieli i byli odpowiedzialni za te zbrodnie.
A co autor tego wideo ma wspólnego z wojną? Nic!
Owszem ma, wspólny język.
@@iwonalewanczyk3103no i? Sami Niemcy trafiali do obozów koncentracyjnych jeśli sprzeciwiali się Hitlerowi. Tak samo jak u nas byli Polacy, którzy wydawali Niemcom Żydów w celu osiągnięcia własnych korzyści majątkowych.
@@michaelf1487 O nie nie, to jest właśnie to, czego dzisiejsi Niemcy chcą. To nie przodkowie Polaków czy Portugalczyków rozpętali wojny, tylko Niemców. To na nich ma ciążyć to piętno, nie mogą się od niego odciąć.
Tak, ale należy być konsekwentnym i mówić, że później rządzili Polacy a nie komuniści.
The most perfidious thing is that many of the achievements that Poland is owed are attributed to other countries (previously this was mainly the case), e.g. Enigma, and collaboration with the Germans was attributed, while such Belgians, French and Dutch collaborated with the Germans and, most interestingly, little is said about it! Therefore, in my opinion, in terms of how much Poland had to suffer throughout its history, plus the lies that other countries repeat, I believe that we are the most harmed nation, not counting the destruction caused during World War II, everyone ignored us, and we just wanted to be normal and calm lives
13 bullshit. We have normal pizza but we love to put extra sauce on top. Most common is ketchup or garlic sauce.
zależy co nazywasz normalan pizza. Żaden Włoch nie nazwie polskiej pizzy normalną. Mimo wszystko wolę naszą
There was never Marie “Curie”. Her name was always Maria Skłodowska and later Skłodowska-Curie.
``Używała tylko Marie Curie. Poza tym we Francji nazwisko po mężu piszą pierwsze.
@@JacekCzarnomski-cw8ul
Masz rację tylko w tym, że Francuski używają pierwsze nazwiska męża a później swoje (panieńskiego). Jednak Maria chciała by jej nazwisko SKŁODOWSKA było pierwsze przed nazwiskiem męża CURIE!! Tak, jak jest w Polsce!!!!!!! Piotr Curie zgodził się na to bo bardzo kochał Marię!!! Cały ówczesny świat wiedział że jest Polką (Einstein, Bohr,i inni wielcy fizycy i chemicy!). Po II wojnie światowej Francja chciała ,aby nie Maria był wynalazcą POLON i RAD !!!! To JEST SKANDAL!!!!!! To WŁAŚNIE MARIA SKŁODOWSKA - ( po mężu Curie prawo do tego że jej nazwisko polskie było przed jego na to wyraził zgodę jej mąż - Francuz!!! ). Jak mogą teraz w UE nauczać że MARIA SKŁODOWSKA - CURIE była francuską!!!!!!😡😡😡😡😡🤬🤬🤬🤬!!!!!! Ogladnij film o MS-C !!!! Polski !!!!! Lub polsko- francuski!!!!!!!! Tam jest PRAWDA!!!
Pozdrawiam ❤️❤️❤️
Francuzi o Fryderyku Chopinie też mówią, że to jest kompozytor polsko-francuski. Widać , że lubią przywłaszczać sobie sławnych Polaków .
Who was behind the signature M. Curie, with Marie's handwriting? An imposter?
@@JacekCzarnomski-cw8ul A w Polsce pisano Skłodowska Curie. Jeśli według Ciebie ważniejsze jest, jak pisali we Francji, to super. W końcu we Francji kobiety były poniżane dłużej, niż w Polsce, to co w tym dziwnego.
Sir... She goes Maria Skłodowska-Curie. Where Skłodowska is her maiden surname, Curie is from Pierre Curie, her husband.
I'm polish and I've never heard about the pizza one, also - lektor and dubbing are two different things, the lektor reads over the actors' voices
polish >>> Polish
The fact that Skłodowska married a Frenchman does not mean that she is French. Well, no kidding!
I guess that putting France as a priority means nothing
Maria Skłodowska is Polish. She married a French guy named Pierre Curie but she is Polish
Wow someone is nawalony.....she is dead.
Poland wasn't attacked by Nazists but by the Germany and Soviets.
For years, German youth have been taught that the Nazis are to blame for everything, and there were 161 of them (that's how many were sentenced at Nuremberg). And these 161 Nazis intimidated all of Germany, and of course the Germans did not support them.
The bombing in 1939 only partially destroyed Warsaw, most of the buildings were blown up by the Germans (probably the 161 Nazis) after the Warsaw Uprising, deliberately planting explosives, tenement house after tenement house.
Germany and russia not soviets
@@sabor995 soviets. Remember that USSR consisted of Russians and many other nations. Ukrainians, Belarusians,....
It was Soviet Union not Russian Union.
@@sabor995and Slowakia
@@lava7157 Rosja
W kalendarzu jest napisane że mężczyźni z imieniem Krystian mają imienniny 4 grudnia, ale także mogą 18 marca, ale tego już nie ma napisane. W zależności kiedy masz urodziny to najbliższy dzień który obchodzi twoje imię, staje się dniem twoich imienin.
😮Niech odkrywa, bo my Polacy nie mamy się czego wstydzić . Super Chris czekam na więcej 😊
MARIA SKŁODOWSKA-CURIE! a nie zadna Marie Curie xd
Bulletproof vest was invented in Poland
Fun fact about Maria Sklodowska Curie's beef stew recipe: If you want to look at her "secret" recipe, you need to go to Switzerland, pay for the entrance to one of the vaults where her cookbook is stored, and put on a hazmat suit since her cookbook is radioactive. I think she went the extra mile to make sure that her stew recipe remained really secret. Yeah, yeah, she was Polish.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
The oldest school in Poland was established in 1180 and is active up today.
I love Polish nature! Polish mountains are beautiful! These are the Crown of Polish Mountains - 28 peaks in their 28 :-)ranges:
Łysica 614 m n.p.m. - Góry Świętokrzyskie
Ślęża 718 m n.p.m. - Masyw Ślęży
Skopiec 724 m n.p.m. - Góry Kaczawskie
Kłodzka Góra 765 m n.p.m. - Góry Bardzkie
Chełmiec 869 m n.p.m. - Góry Wałbrzyskie
Biskupia Kopa 889 m n.p.m. - Góry Opawskie
Lubomir 912 m n.p.m. - Beskid Makowski
Szczeliniec Wielki 919 m n.p.m. - Góry Stołowe
Czupel 934 m n.p.m. - Beskid Mały
Waligóra 936 m n.p.m. - Góry Kamienne
Skalnik 945 m n.p.m. - Rudawy Janowickie
Jagodna 977 m n.p.m. - Góry Bystrzyckie
Kowadło 989 m n.p.m. - Góry Złote
Lackowa 997 m n.p.m. - Beskid Niski
Wielka Sowa 1015 m n.p.m. - Góry Sowie
Wysoka 1050 m n.p.m. - Pieniny
Orlica 1084 m n.p.m. - Góry Orlickie
Rudawiec 1112 m n.p.m. - Góry Bialskie
Wysoka Kopa 1126 m n.p.m. - Góry Izerskie
Mogielica 1173 m n.p.m. - Beskid Wyspowy
Skrzyczne 1257 m n.p.m. - Beskid Śląski
Radziejowa 1262 m n.p.m. - Beskid Sądecki
Turbacz 1310 m n.p.m. - Gorce
Tarnica 1346 m n.p.m. - Bieszczady
Śnieżnik 1425 m n.p.m. - Masyw Śnieżnika
Śnieżka 1602 m n.p.m. - Karkonosze
Babia Góra 1725 m n.p.m. - Beskid Żywiecki
Rysy 2499 m n.p.m. - Tatry
:-)
Polskie góry, polską naturę piszemy z małej litery... :)
@@michakozowski8726 :) U mnie w Słowniczku ortograficznym Jodłowskiego i Taszyckiego jest z wielkiej. W internetowym także znalazłam: cyt: Nazwy geograficzne i miejscowe (regiony, krainy, miasta, góry, rzeki itp.) - Wszystkie człony nazw geograficznych i miejscowych (regionów, krain, miast, gór, rzek itp.), z wyjątkiem przyimków, piszemy wielką literą.
Nazwy gór i łańcuchów górskich zapisujemy od wielkiej litery. Na przykład:
Tatry,
Alpy,
Wzgórza Czekoladowe,
Babia Góra,
Kasprowy Wierch,
Gubałówka. /koniec cytatu/
Tak też zapamiętałam to ze szkoły. Może u Ciebie inaczej uczyli, nie oceniam, pozdrawiam!
a co mają szczyty górskie z Marie Curie?
@@JacekCzarnomski-cw8ul Nr 8. 4:39
Kissing womans hand is not in fashion but still happens among the older high educated generation . I remember after my master"s thesis defence every committee member kissed my hand to show their respect. It was little embrassing but nice.
Interestingly, a city 140 km away from Warsaw was barely touched. Łódź, the city I'm talking about, was cosidered up to German standards. The city before the war housed four cultures (Polish, Jewish, German and Russian) and Germans who came there influenced the growth of the city immensly. Because of that there was also a big Volskdeutsch community.
Funnily enough some buildings in Łódź had to be taken apart to rebuild Warsaw.
Wrocław was heavily damaged by the Russian attack and the senseless German resistance, which had no chance of success. Germany declared Wrocław a fortress (Festung Breslau). Breslau defended until May 6. Breslau continued to defend even after Hitler's death (April 20) and after Berlin's capitulation (May 2). More can be found under Festung Breslau.
Wroclaw has been rebuild after World war 2 nearly clompletely like it looks before the war. On the market square there is an exhibition of Photos before the war, after the war ( all destroyed ) and now. It is very impressing, how beautiful Poland rebuild this town after the war - Chapeau. In Germany most old towns were not rebuild , the have build new houses in the style quadratic - practicable - good and it's looking ugly.
The 'Polish dubbing' thing is a very wrong way of looking at it.
It's not 'very bad dub', it's 'great subtitles that read themselves!'
It stems from waaaay back when, from the time of small CRT TVs, analogue signal and low resolution.
At the same time, small country that does not produce enough content to fill the whole lineup with native programming so you have to get some foreign stuff and that gives you a dilemma; either dub it or subtitle it.
Dubing a lot of content takes a lot of money and time.
Subtitles would not be visible on crappy old TVs.
So... Have someone read the subtitles in a monotone and unobtrusive way.
Presto! Polish 'lektor'.
And we got so used to it that whenever you come across something actually dubbed on the telly, you switch the channel, cause "it must be something for kids or teens" (those did get dubbed way back when).
And yes, now that we can afford a proper dub we DO NOT WANT IT! 😁
True, we don't want dubbing!
I hate dubbing! 😖
Eeeh ?
It's the most boomer thing I ever read. True, lector is better than subtitles, but it's much worse than dubbing. Learning english amazing thing, it's allow you to fully enjoy movies with english dubbing, hear emotions and know with movie is shit and with one is amazing. Nowadays most of the movies are total shit, actors do no work and dubbing would be better, but there are tones of Gret movies better with dubbing, part of them not even in native dubbing, Shrek show great voice work.
@@Darwidx Shrek, you say? So a CARTOON, when dubbed was great, huh? Yeah, you kinda prove my point..
@@Dreju78 What can I say, I usually don't warch movies as an adult because they're total shit and when I do, I watch them in english version.
@@Darwidx so you're not for dubbed movies, you're just "against movies".
You know you can watch some older, non-shit stuff too, right? Also, some good stuff still does get made. Just don't go for block busters.
If we talking about Marie Skłodowska-Curie and Pierre Curie, after discovering they named Polonium by the name of Poland, that didn’t exist as independent state at the time.
Lektor - it's a person who reads subtitles, doesn't replace original voices
You are wrong. When the narrator reads the text, you can hear the actor's natural voices. Poles don't want dubbing. When I was in Germany, I couldn't watch movies because of the terrible dubbing.
I agree. That's partly a reason so many Polish people understand English, without studying it.
Halloween is NOT a new thing, it is based on an old tradition, like most such things. Halloween's origins can be traced back to the ancient (at least about 2 thousand years ago) Celtic festival known as Samhain, which was held on November 1 in contemporary calendars (or according to rather sources: on the night of October 31). It was believed that on that day, the souls of the dead returned to their homes, so people dressed in costumes and lit bonfires to ward off spirits.
In later centuries, people began dressing as ghosts, demons, and other malevolent creatures, performing antics in exchange for food and drink. This custom, known as mumming, dates back to the Middle Ages and is thought to be an antecedent of trick-or-treating. (source: History com, "How Trick-or-Treating Became a Halloween Tradition")
Hey there, Thank you for making a reaction video on this video. Appreciated a lot.
Chris, you are a very likeable young man, but we should stick to the facts. You say 3:04, but Poland was attacked by Germany, not "Nazists". There was no country called "Naziland", nor did the attackers speak "Nazish". There attackers did not sing the anthem of Naziland here, the death camps were owned by a certain state and the proceeds went to a certain state and it was not Naziland.
This is a sensetive issue in Poland.
I always hear it wasn't the Nazis, it was the Germans. Guess what, it was both, because the Nazis were in command and the Nazis (at least most of them) were Germans. But what is always implied with the statement is that the Germans all wanted it that way and that is wrong, many Russians don't want war with Ukraine now either, but you see what happens with critics like Navalny. What Germans wanted at the time were secure jobs, a stable government and a stable currency and a man who would show them the way in such an uncertain time. However, very few people wanted the direction he showed them, but by then it was already too late, which is always the case in a dictatorship. When times are uncertain, people like to vote for extremes (especially right-wingers) because they have simple solutions, like back then the Jews and non-Aryans were the culprits and today it's the foreigners who only live in our country at state expense or the Germans who brought foreigners to Europe and now don't want to bother about it.
@@chris.poland Dear Chris, this is a never ending discussion and I'm afraid you'll be getting this kind of comments with every video, because even if you answer some people now, there always will be new ones who'll see a video and react to that. In short, there were times when Poles didn't care about whether those were the Nazis or Germans or Nazi camps or Polish camps (seeing it as only depiction of the territory and politics, and not the national ownership of the camps). That all ended some 20 years ago when it was discovered that so much time had passed, and the history lessons all over the world are so bad, that children asked in surveys "Who were the Nazis" chose the answer "Poles", and it turned out that was because of using the name "Polish camps". Then people looked even closer, and it turned out that even Dachau and Buchenwald are sometimes called "Polish camps" because who cares about geography. It's even more confusing with the territories that are in Poland now but weren't during WW2. I.e. Auschwitz wasn't built in Poland. It was built in Germany, in the territories that were officially annexed to the Reich while all Poles living there were expelled, and most Polish Jews never saw Auschwitz. On the other hand, camps like Majdanek or Treblinka were built in the occupied Poland, and that's where the Polish Jews died. Since then Poles are allergic to the word Nazi being used separately from any nationality, and a huge diplomatic action was taken to convince media and institutions all over the world to change their language. So if you want to avoid the never ending comments but at the same time don't want to blame all the Germans, I'd suggest using the names Nazi Germany and Nazi Germans, or even Nazi Germans and their allies since we know those weren't only Germans. Or just add a relevant caption in your vids to end the subject. Trust me, once you'll get through this point it'll get easier.
@@sylwia1410 I hope in the future I have a strong viewership with a strong voice that they attack such comments before I have to do 😊. You are very free to copy and paste my earlier answers under them 😊
@@chris.poland Sylwia has just expanded on my comment , and I fully agree with her explanation. How come then that you agree with her and attack what I have written? Or have I misunderstood something bacause i didn't even think that you attacked my comment- I thought it was just your viewpoint. 🤔
Do you know why Jewish young genereation hates Poles and sees us rather than German as the WWII "bad guys" - because according to the narratiive , their ancestors died in "nazi Polish capms" ! For them it's the Poles who run the business there, they don' even know that the first transports of prisoners were 100% Poles and that milions of Poles died during this war just like the Jews, nor that there was no Poland on the maps during WWII.
By the way, as a child I neighoured a Polish survivor of Auschwitz and visited him untill 2020 when he passed away .He shared with me lots of stories you can't find im books and films.
But they were Germans?@@chris.poland
Until 1945, the Germans very often omitted the name Polonium when creating the Periodic Table of the Elements, also at universities, leaving the box for this element unnamed.
Really? Was this element found by Marie?
23 fact: Poland was first catholic Country, which invented religious tolerance (1414-1418 Council of Konstanz)
Paweł Włodkowic.
I lived in 12 countries and saw nobody understand this. So I know that idea of lector in polish tv is hard to understand. But the truth is that you STOP HEARING (really we don't hear him) a lector after 10 minutes and you sill can hear the original version of the movie - but you can understand it. I know is hard to belive but is like a magic😂 This is one of the reason why Polish people are speaking so good English. Because we HEARING A ORGINAL english in every movie... and even without understand other language we understand the meaning... magic😅
Sometimes, people from Poland get very VERRRYYY upset when someone calls Maria Skłodowska Curie "Marie Curie", probably because Curie was her husband's last name, and they prefer to hear M A R I A and S K L O D O W S K A. Personally, as a proud female of Poland, I believe it isn't 'offensive' like some say, It's just not accurate since we all know the name 'Maria' exist. ALTHOUGH, I'm not offended when someone says Marie Curie. I only get a bit sad when they say Marie Curie is from France, when she clearly isn't. And the famous Polon is named after the beloved country she belongs to, anyway. This video was very interesting, and I hope that the whole world will know once and for all that at least she was from Poland. Thank you for reading, sorry if there are any mistakes, have a wonderful day and stay safe!!
Your name days are: March 18, November 13 and December 4. Your name day is celebrated on the day closest to your birthday
yes, closest but only after birthday
@@MonikaMazgola Yes!
In this case is not close. Are you counting backwards.....
Yup Curie-Sklodowska was actually Polish, she lived near me in small village named Szczuki (It is in the northern masovia) :)
Kupała's night, is mainly celebrating in Polish small towns and villages on 21-22 June (still practiced in Masovia, Podlasie, Lubelszczyzna)
It is an event combined with a big bonfire (with herbs) and dancing.
Single women weave wreaths and then send them down the river. Then, single men must catch them.
Exist superstition, that if a women wreath will be lost or damaged, she will be single forever (stara panna).
After catching floating wreaths, young lovers going to the forest to find the legend 'fern flowers'.
Also at the east of Poland (close to the border with Belarus), we have unique and very old tradition cold "Brodacze ze Sławatycz". Men are dress out for colorful costumes made by themselves. At the tree last days of the year, they scream, jump, run on the main streets and scare people, for away everything evil. All of this to make next year better.
Polish lector is not because of shortage of money to hire more actors. It's just a tradition in Poland, and if one gets used to it, it's actually even better than dubbing. Because You can hear a bit of the original voices, while he is reading. And the people chosen to work as lectors have really good, characteristic voices, that are remembered later for years or decades (everyone knows in Poland some of these voices). I personally hate dubbing and cannot watch movies with dubbing. If it's dubbing, I choose original version with subtitles (even if it's Chinese or Japanese etc.).
Marie Curie's daughter, Eve, produced the film "Land Of My Mother":
ua-cam.com/video/WJwUpSSYOPQ/v-deo.html
Polon = Poland dziekuje Marii Skłodowskiej Curie !!
Piwnica Świdnicka in Wrocław was created in 13th century and it was serving beer from my home town Świdnica. There were several "pubs" like this all over europe.
Świdnica beers were one of the best in those times.
Urodzony w Świdnicy ❤
The "beer war" broke out in Wrocław. The city allows the sale beer from Świdnica only in Piwnica Świdnicka, but the church broke this restriction, which led to the war.
Ja też ze Świdnicy, pozdrawiam :-)
@@miroslawobr3383
No i jeszcze, że najstarszy bumerang z Jaskini obłazowej ma ca 28000 lat, że Waza z Bronocic to najstarszy na świecie wizerunek wozu kołowego zaprzęgowego, i że na Kujawach znaleziono gliniane durszlaki z pozostałościami sera sprzed 8000 lat. No i że Krzysztof Kolumb był synem Władysława III Warneńczyka, jak donosi po 20 latach szperania dr Manuel Rosa z Portugalii.
Poland! 😍
Nie macie pojęcia jak wielkim narodem jesteśmy .morze to i dobrze😎😀
Inuru is an innovative and first and only startup in the world that specializes in printing light using OLED technology. Founded by Marcin Ratajczak and Patryk Barkowski, who opened a new factory in Berlin.
Firma Inuru, to innowacyjny i jedyny taki startup na świecie, który specjalizuje się w drukowaniu światła dzięki technologii oled. Założony przez Marcina Ratajczaka i Patryka Barkowskiego, którzy otworzyli nową fabrykę w Berlinie.
Maria Skłodowska-Curie drugie nazwisko męża
I actually like the lector 😅 I prefer it because I can still hear the original sound and it's so subliminal that I stop thinking about him in a few minutes 😁 just understand movies from even more exotic countries like South Corea still hearing how it sounds in original 👌 😄
About celebrating namedays and birthdays, its sometimes a weird topic since in some parts of Poland people only celebrate namedays, in other parts only birthdays and in others both. Me for instance I live and was born in Śląsk. Most people here only celebrate birthday. But my Grandpa who was born and lived most of his live in Białystok only celebrates namedays. We still have calendars with names for each day tho.
10:00 about allowing contraceptives in Poland, it's of course rubbish, untrue. Of course, they are allowed, since decades.
I like lector more than dubbing. Why? Because dubbing will never cover actors' mouth moves perfectly. So it is a bit uncomfortable to watch. When you hear lector and original voices in the background, that sounds more natural. Also lector tries to express with his voice the emotions specific to each character in the movie. Not everyone can be a lector. It is almost an art.
I believe that Polish TV voice-over has more advantages than typical dubbing, where each actor has a voice in a given language. This way you listen to the original language of the film and at the same time hear what it means. This is how I learned English by watching films, most often in English. I don't speak it perfectly, but I speak it well enough that I can communicate in it. And what's most interesting. I understand much more than I say, but that's only due to grammar deficiencies, etc. However, for many years I have been watching films on YT or elsewhere in English, without subtitles in Polish. Moreover, the dubbing (not only Polish, but also German, probably others as well) is terribly artificial. Only in children's films does Polish dubbing sound good. Perhaps because a lot more effort and work is put into it to make it sound good.
Best regards. :)
Noo! Movies read by lector are much better! I found dubbing horrible! 🙈
Its not about kissing the hand of an lady, its about letting them pass 1st in dorways and things like that
Thank You. BTW I love lector, when watching movie the voice is like in back of my head and I also hear original sounds, voices, environment.
No when you know the language in the film......
@@grash4435 ofcourse, why would I need lector if characters speak my language?
Mój mąż i szwagier, zawsze całują w dłoń na znak szacunku do kobiety. Kulturę "wynosisz" z domu. Tak ich mama nauczyła.🙂
Movies on Polish TV are NOT DUBBED. Dubbing is the entire replacement of original actors' voices. In Poland, the original voices (English, French, German, Italian etc.) are dimly audible. It's just that one guy reads all the parts over those original voices.
I like the etymology of the world Poland: In antiquity Poland was known as Lachia. Later in Middle Ages Poles where called po-Lachy (after-Lachy). Lachy- inhabitants of Lachia.
Możecie ludzie wyluzować troche w komentarzach? Chcemy żeby obcokrajowcy mieli o nas opinie jako dumny, inteligentny naród czy zakompleksiony, cienko-skóry naród?
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 nie zapominaj o tym że my myślimy że jesteśmy pempkiem świata.....
Niemcy właśnie mają się za inteligentniejszych od innych, a nie mają ku temu żadnych podstaw. Jeśli zachód jest taki wspaniały, to może mi wyjaśnisz dlaczego rodowici Francuzi i Niemcy nie czują się bezpiecznie na swoich ulicach?
Polish was not invaded by nazis,invaded by Germans
True. However they were under control of the National Socialist government. You know, same as how we weren't invaded by Russians in 1920, but Soviets, soldiers of who were of many nationalities. Same how we were invaded in 1939 by Stalin, not by Russians/Ukrainians/Georgians/Azerbaijani's. It is worth focusing on who gave the orders. It's always who should be the most responsible.
Dokładnie. Niemiaszek nie został tego nauczony
@@janyeti9843niemiecki śmieć się zachwyca polską😂 a pewno jego dziadek służący w Wermachcie też się zachwycał , tyle że w latach 40
It was invaded by Nazi Germany !
@@foxar9606um actually🤓✋✋
I really like your videos :D it makes me calm and relaxed. Good vibe
0:30 as a Pole, I just took it personal. Danke. Common history since 9th century... and that sip, lol
Szkoda że nie powiedział że Enigmę rozszyfrowali polscy matematycy było ich trzech i dali swoim sojusznikom Angliką a oni tego na świat nie prostują tylko się chwalą że to oni .Królowa Elżbieta jak była w Polsce to przeprosiła za to Polaków .Szkoda że ,,na ucho,,, a nie na cały świat. Nie ładnie oj nieładnie
I know that I'd said that before... but I love your videos! :D First of all, many nations take credit for Polish people achievements, Maria Curie-Skłodowska (FR), deciphering the Enigma code (UK) and so on... (we are used to it - I can only speak for myself, but I believe, that true will always come out at the end, so I don't care). Malbork was built by the Teutonic Order, so it's actually a German achievement, not Polish :) Voice-overs in films are a totally different story... When you hear the narrator, you also hear the actors' statements in the original version, so you learn the language faster - it's not a matter of saving money, but of getting the viewers familiar with a foreign languages. If you like it or not, finally you understand other languages without knowing them - so I think it's really clever :)
However, during the war about 50-60% of Malbork castle was destroyed and Poland on her own had to restore it after the war.
@@MayaTheDecemberGirl Yeah I know that, but the concept was theirs :)
Nowadays on many TV channels you can switch between oryginal and dubbed-by-one-person audio nad turn on/off subtitles. The same on streaming platforms. But full dubbing is reserved for cartoons and films for children.
Very nice reaction ❤
And I have to admit that mushrooming is polish national sport. I live near forest and it is funny to see people having picking competition in season. People can go to forest at 5am to be first and if you go for example at 9am you will find nothing since every single square of the forest was already scanned by fanatical pickers.
Maria Skłodowska jest Polką z Polski ale miała męża francuza
About lektor thing is that poles are so much used to it that if for instant i hear dubbing i changing on original sound with subtitles or just turn it off. I can't stand dubbing except for animations.
Imagine that you have watched LOTR like 20 times, you know exactly voice of every single charakter and now you hear dubbing with some strange voices acting poorly ... disgusting.
Keine Nazis, sondern Deutsche und ihr Führer. Die Nazis kamen nicht aus dem Weltraum, sie kamen aus Deutschland! Sieh's ein.
Also bist du nicht ein Pole und ein Mann gleichzeitig. Krass, dass man nicht zwei Sachen gleichzeitig sein kann, gut, dass du mir das beigebracht hast. Wir nutzen in Deutschland den Term Nazis damit jeder sofort weiß von welcher Zeit wir reden.
Genius.....Good job you explained, we are so stupid and didn't have a clue....where Nazis come from...
@@grash4435 Obviously anyone who calls them Nazis instead of Germans (as they proudly called themselves) doesn't have a clue, and needs to be corrected. Don't want to be corrected? Then start calling them GERMANS. End of story.
@@chris.polandmówcie po prostu Niemcy, a nie naziści. Niemcy rozpętali II wojnę światową, Niemcy pomordowali miliony ludzi, Niemcy stworzyli obozy koncentracyjne i mordowali tam masowo ludzi, Niemcy zniszczyli Warszawę itd.
To takie trudne? Kto wybrał tych nazistów w legalnych i demokratycznych wyborach? No chyba nie Chińczycy? Niemcy ich wybrali i popierali czerpiąc ogromne zyski z rozpętania wojny, okupacji innych krajów, grabieży dóbr i mienia innych narodów. Doczytaj, trochę się dowiedz więcej. Nikt przecież Ciebie człowieku nie wini za to co zrobili twoi rodacy 80 lat temu - to byłoby bezsensu. Natomiast będziemy Ci wytykać że tego nie wiesz i palisz głupa. Nie dziw. Nasi rodacy zostali mordowani. Niemalże każdy w Polsce ma kogoś kogo zabili Niemcy w czasie okupacji. Więc żartów nie ma.
Na dodatek dodam, że obecnie Niemcy bardzo chętnie używają słowa Naziści, aby niejako odepchnąć od siebie odpowiedzialność za II wojnę światową. Ale spokojnie, macie obok Polaków którzy przy każdej okazji będą Wam o tym przypominam tak żebyście przypadkiem o tym nie zapomnieli.
Gorące pozdrowienia🫡
If you thought Maria Skłodowska-Curie was French, you probably think Joseph Conrad was English. Well, Conrad ethnically was 100% Polish and his original name was Jozef Teodor Konrad Korzeniowski coat of arms Nałęcz.
The same goes for the great French poet, Apoliner. His Polish name was Apolinary Kostrowicki.
And how about the Germans? Well, Friedrich Nietzsche insisted that he had Polish roots, that his lineage descended from a family of Polish nobility with the surname Nicki. This can only be a myth.
What is not a myth, on the other hand, is that Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz's roots lie in a Polish Arian family with the surname Lubieniecki.
An interesting figure is the eminent surgeon Jan Mikulicz-Radecki, known in Germany as Johann Freiherr von Mikulicz-Radecki. His parental ancestors of the Mikulicz family were of Polish szlachta origin and had been granted the Gozdawa coat of arms by King John III Sobieski after the 1683 Battle of Vienna. His mother Emilie Freiin von Damnitz was of Austrian descent. When asked his nationality he simply answered "surgeon".
The maiden name of Gottlob Frege's mother was Blaloblotzky. In the Polish orthography Białobłocki. It is a purely Polish surname with the meaning: coming from the white marshes.
One final comment. First let me ask, do you have a fridge?
If so, mention Kraków on 29 March. On 29 March 1883, oxygen was liquefied in Krakow, followed a few days later by nitrogen and carbon monoxide. This was done by two professors from the Jagiellonian University: Zygmunt Wróblewski (physicist) and Karol Olszewski (chemist). In doing so, they opened the way to low-temperature technology.
Haha It's quite obvious that Nietzsche claimed to be Polish to troll the early German nationalists. Schopenhauer, on the other hand, had family tradition deeply rooted in the Royal Prussia. The partition of Poland and annexing of the territories by Prussia was for his family a personal tragedy.
@@sylwia1410 As for Nietzsche, you are probably right. However, it is puzzling that his sister, with close ties to the Nazis, never denied her brother's claim of their Polish ancestry. And yet it seems that in her own interest she should have done so.
@@arturkranz-dobrowolski2959 As much as Nazis saw Poles as subhumans, they still saw the European aristocracy as super humans, so perhaps she simply liked the claim of noble blood. Or she didn't take the claim seriously, or was too busy rewriting Nietzsche's works.
Lector is wonderful!😅 Its our National treasure😆
I've also have my name day 4th of December, cheers! ;)
Her surname was Maria Sklodowska and Curie came just after her husband Pirre Curie and correctly she is Maria Sklodowska-Curie because in Poland the surname after huasband came always as a secondary.
We are used to the lektor, I tend to prefer it over dubbing. We don't know name days in general, there are some popular that everybody knows about, but not most
7:20 "Śmingus Dyngus" Muszę to zwerfikować.Ten piękny zwyczaj ,można by powiedzieć, praktycznie zanikł i to już kilkadziesiąt lat temu.A był to piękny zwyczaj,młodzi chłopcy czychali na młode dziewczyny z wiadrami,sikawkami z wodą i je oblewali,Chodziło o to żeby jak najwięcej dziewczyn oblać.Z kolei dziewczyna która była najczęściej oblewana miała większe powodzenie u chłopaków.Nawet zdarzało się tak że oblana dziewczyna,poszła do domu żeby się przebrać,by po chwili wróćić żeby być znowu oblaną.Ten zwyczaj zanikł,z prostego powodu...ucywilizowania naszego kraju...po prostu nikt już nie chce być oblanym na ulicy.
Nie zanikł, bo dzieci nadal wychodzą na dwór i ganiają się z pistoletami na wodę. Nie jest to już może tak powszechne i popularne (szczególnie, że klimat się zmienił, więc często jest na to po prostu za zimno), ale nadal można się z tym zwyczajem spotkać. Zmienił się tylko jego kontekst. ;-)
Zmiany nazwiska są tak jak na przykładzie nazwiska Kowalski. In Polen the nicknames they change depending on the ending it's usually mainly the ending for the men is "i" for the womens "a" becouse it depends on the gender. YOU WELCOME😘😘
The origin of Vodka is debatable, perhaps in Poland, perhaps by Vikings, perhaps invented in parallel by Russia, Sweden, Finland, and Poland
The oldest written recipe is in Poland
It's NOT debatable. Only Poland has written documentation of the production of vodka under that name since Medieval Ages. Corporate marketing fantasies, just like Russian, Sweidish or Finnish egos, count for nothing when it comes to easily verifiable historical facts, so stop spreading nonsense.
@@pythagorasnineDocumentation is usually not needed (eg Beer and Wine have been proven to have been invented long before the processes were documented), and if the spirit needs to be called the same everywhere then Sweden didn't invent it until the 90ies, it has always been called "brännvin" (burnt, or distilled, Wine) here
@@pythagorasnineI did a tiny bit of research, and it seems like Vodka was invented in Russia and Poland at about the same time, and called Voda and Woda respectivly. It's fair to suspect that it was the Rus or Varangians, ie the Swedish Vikings who came up with it.
However, as per usual, the Chinese were first. They disdtilled clear liquor from grain about 1000 years earlier
I'm Polish and I love watching movies with voice of one Man called "lektor". I don't like dubbing
Yeh she is cz her full name is Maria Skłodowska Curie bc her husband was french
W dokumentach stało: Maria Skłodowska (Curie po francuskim mężu). Kopernik też był Polakiem.
You treat "Polish lector" like a "foreground background". You can still hear the original (Stallone's, Sharzenegger's, Weaver's, Johansson's voice) roles. Let's say it's just a Siri translating your movie. ; ]
Actually i hat Dubbing, but I love voice-over!
I find it to be incredibly shameful that the custom of kissing a woman's hand is disappearing. It's all about chivalry and stuff. But that also seems to be disappearing. I wonder when women will open the door for men...
4:30 Crescent Beach, Oregon. Not Poland
Wrocław, Gdańsk, and Warsaw were completely destroyed during ww2 (especially the historical parts of the cities). Kraków was the only major Polish city that wasn't completely ruined during ww2 altough it was still damaged during the fight and bombing.
Neither Vilnius nor Lviv were destroyed, only they're no longer Polish.
Toruń.
@@Paolo-gj7ip its not a big city
First atacked city by Germans in WWII was WIELUN (in central Poland) not GDANSK (DANZIG) but division of Westerplatte was fight 7 days having an ammo for only few hours
AND yes we have desert - its BLEDOWSKA desert :)
The next place of the brave Polish fight is Wizna (a small village in the Podlaskie Voivodeship on the road from Łomża to Białystok). Only 700 Polish soldiers fought for 3 days against over 40,000 Nazi soldiers with the support of tanks and the Luftwaffe.