Hello maam monica, thank you for lesson 😊 i like more it makes me more learn but is hard to understand if my mother in law talk,i want to reply with here a polish but i cant 😢 anyways im new here in poland live with my husband new married ja jestem jane 😊i live in poland like 1month ,and im obsessed 😅to learn polish , i hope you see my message and you teach me how to catch all polish language, thank you and more blessings ❤
Not yet. The verbs conjugate differently for men and women in the past tense and conditional forms. In the present tense and imperatives there is no difference. In the future tense it depends on the type of the future tense. For example for "kochać": Kocham. - I love. (present tense, no difference) Kochaj! - Love! (imperative, no difference) Kochałem/Kochałam. - I loved. (past tense, different forms for a man/woman) Kochałbym/Kochałabym. - I would love. / I would have loved. (conditional, different forms for a man/woman). Będę kochać. - I will love. (future tense with infinitive, no difference) Będę kochał/kochała. - I will love. (future tense with past participle, different forms for a man/woman)
:) "Lubię tę lekcję." is ok. But this would mean that you like the lesson very much, it is among your favorite lessons, and most likely you watched it many times. If you simply like the lesson after one time watching, you'd rather say: "Podoba(ła) mi się ta lekcja" or simply "Ta lekcja jest fajna/ciekawa/dobra/..."
lubię - I like lubi - he, she, it likes lubimy - we like lubią - they like lubisz - you like lubicie - you like (to a group of people) You can say "lubię Libię" which means "I like Libya" (the country). There is no such word as "lubim" but poorly educated people sometimes say so instead of "lubimy".
You have a knack for making videos about something I'm confused about , like use of swoje, and clearing it up. Thank you.
Thank You Monika. Your explanation is flawless. I find using Podoba mi sie is challenging. I hope with practice it gets easier.
Your videos are becoming my new ASMR.
I will be in Poland this August 2023. I am visiting my husband's grandfather there. Thank you for the lessons 🎉
thank you so much Monika come again 🥀🥀🥀
Hello maam monica, thank you for lesson 😊 i like more it makes me more learn but is hard to understand if my mother in law talk,i want to reply with here a polish but i cant 😢 anyways im new here in poland live with my husband new married ja jestem jane 😊i live in poland like 1month ,and im obsessed 😅to learn polish , i hope you see my message and you teach me how to catch all polish language, thank you and more blessings ❤
Thanks Monika.I need more content in polish.
Uwielbiam twój kanał. Dziękuję bardzo. 🤍🧿🪬
Cześć Monika
Bardzo lubię twój kanał, jest duża pomocą
O fajnie, bardzo podoba mi się twój filmik🥰
Thank you I really appreciate this channel
Thank you so much this is very helpful to me I am applying there for Study in Poland very soon.
thanks v much
Thanks Monica.
Can you do a video on imperfective and perfective aspect
So nice sister
Is there a video about conjugating verbs differently for men and women?
Not yet.
The verbs conjugate differently for men and women in the past tense and conditional forms. In the present tense and imperatives there is no difference. In the future tense it depends on the type of the future tense.
For example for "kochać":
Kocham. - I love. (present tense, no difference)
Kochaj! - Love! (imperative, no difference)
Kochałem/Kochałam. - I loved. (past tense, different forms for a man/woman)
Kochałbym/Kochałabym. - I would love. / I would have loved. (conditional, different forms for a man/woman).
Będę kochać. - I will love. (future tense with infinitive, no difference)
Będę kochał/kochała. - I will love. (future tense with past participle, different forms for a man/woman)
@@PolishwithMonikaThis is a great summary of vwrb conjugation not just for kochać but for many verbs! I'm saving this. Dziękuję!
Thank you
Dziękuję bardzo 😁
Lubię tę lekcję (?)
:)
"Lubię tę lekcję." is ok. But this would mean that you like the lesson very much, it is among your favorite lessons, and most likely you watched it many times.
If you simply like the lesson after one time watching, you'd rather say:
"Podoba(ła) mi się ta lekcja" or simply "Ta lekcja jest fajna/ciekawa/dobra/..."
Beautiful women and nice lesson ❤🎉
Please make a video basic polish language conversation.
❤❤❤❤❤❤
Cześć ❤❤❤❤❤❤
Koham twoj video!!!
Hey is it Libię instead of lubim when saying i like
lubię - I like
lubi - he, she, it likes
lubimy - we like
lubią - they like
lubisz - you like
lubicie - you like (to a group of people)
You can say "lubię Libię" which means "I like Libya" (the country).
There is no such word as "lubim" but poorly educated people sometimes say so instead of "lubimy".
Cześć!
Cześć, Moniko. Tu mówi Jesse. Mówię trochę po polsku.
Ja uwielbiac polski