Polish is spoken by about 45 million people worldwide, of which the majority, 37 million live in Poland. Large Polish speaking communities are to be found in many of its neighbouring countries above all Belorussia, but also Lithuania, Latvia, Russia, the Czech Republic and Slovakia. The countries with the largest Polish speaking communities in Western Europe are Germany and Ireland. At least 2.5 million Polish speaking people live in the United States. Other Polish speaking minorities are to be found in Argentina, Australia and Israel.
Due to its central location in Europe Polish has been influenced by other languages, above all from the Czech language.
Polish is, in contrast to for example Russian, written in the Roman alphabet rather than the Cyrillic alphabet. Nonetheless it does have some special letters: ą – ć – ę – ł – ń – ó – ś – ź – ż. (These special letters are integrated into the Study Software from 17 Minute Languages so that it will be possible enter these letters when using the software.)
We asked a native speaker to record the ABC in Polish for you:
A b c d e f g, h i j k l ł m n o p, q r s t u v w, x y z.
Up to the present four Poles have been awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature: H. Sienkiewicz, W.S. Reymont, C. Miłosz und W. Szymborska.
Polish belongs to the Slavonic Group of Languages. The Slavonic languages are divided into The East Slavonic Languages(Russian, Belorussian and Ukrainian), in the South Slavonic Languages (Bulgarian, Macedonian, Croatian, Slovenian and Serbo-Croatian) and the West Slavonic Languages. The last group includes Slovakian, Czech and Polish. All these languages originated from Proto-Slavic that developed from the Indo-Germanic languages about five thousand years ago. Slavonic languages are spoken by approximately 300 million Native speakers worldwide.
We are delighted about your interest in the Polish Language. We are pleased to offer the following links: