One of the most interesting videos I ever saw about polish people. Gratuluję!
@agneselsayed894812 күн бұрын
I haven’t not heard most of those and really enjoyed watching it! 🤩
@kamilpustula245417 күн бұрын
In the Netherlands they say doing something In "Poolse maneer", which means in Polish way, which accords to: they don't have a fckng clue how we done it but it works :P
@GilmarRossa12 күн бұрын
Gratuluję! Jestem brazyliczykiem, mieszkam w Florianópolis, Stan Santa Catarina. Bardzo wam dziękuję za piękne nagranie. Nauczyłem się bardzo o Polsce rzeczy. Pa pa
@jell_pl17 күн бұрын
it's good to see your whole team there instead of only the dominionic part of the team ;) extremely good vibe from the whole cooperation! please, do more in this theme!
@paxvera519911 күн бұрын
Thank you. You are such a nice family.❤❤
@EarlyStart-z5f18 күн бұрын
Spanish about Napoleons Polish Soldiers: Los Diablos Polakos
@elshar12317 күн бұрын
Szczęśliwego nowego 2025 roku dla całej Waszej Rodziny.
@wojstube935917 күн бұрын
Wspaniałego Nowego Roku dla Waszej rodzinki!
@rudaruda598118 күн бұрын
Vigo looks like his Dad :)
@ukaszshaku506516 күн бұрын
Cześć ludzie!!!! I love that Karolina was so involved and got u a hard time dad💪 Love y’all
@EA0000017 күн бұрын
Happy New Year ! Wow Vigo is gorgessss 😀
@VigosDad17 күн бұрын
Happy new year!!
@nathaliedemchenko905818 күн бұрын
I can't remember any proverbs or sayings in Russian about Poles🤔 But it's rather popular to look for some Polish origin in your family as we have a lot of people with Polish or Polish-like surnames😊 I know that many Poles dislike Russians due to historical reasons, but i can't say it works the other way. Most Russians consider Poles to be hardworking, religious and proud. Every December 31st old soviet movie "The Irony of Fate" starring with Polish actress Barbara Brylska is shown on the first Russian TV channel. It's sort of national tradition to get ready for the evening feast watching it. Happy New 2025 to everyone!☃️🎄 P.S. Vigo is such a cutie😍
@igorwoek50218 күн бұрын
Poles hate Russia, but not necessarily Russians.
@user-ie9fv1dj3d17 күн бұрын
Maybe you should start your story with Catharina the Greatest and her "love" to polish king, and the rest is ..... "love history" to 1772, 1793 and 1795? Then .... 1918 and 1920, oh I'll add sept. 17 of 1939, 1945........etc. Your red star still shining?
@MonikaMazgola17 күн бұрын
Kurica nie ptica, Polsza nie zagranica
@bohomazdesign72517 күн бұрын
I remember watching Andromeda (its a Polish youtube channel that makes videos about Russian propaganda about Poles) and it featured Solovyov (or something like that) and during one of his rants he said that russia is fckd, because the population is numb and then proceeded to say that why cant Russians be so proud and relentless in their patriotism like Poles are.
@margowlodarczyk440017 күн бұрын
I hear: Polish people are like dandelions. Blow by wind all over the world, developed strong roots, flourished, and even bloom
@WladzioRex13 күн бұрын
Good job😊
@PiotrJaser18 күн бұрын
There is a saying in Sweden: to argue like in the Polish parliament. Speaking of the Hungarians, the Treaty of Trianon changed them. It's sad to say, but that trauma remains with them to this day and it seems to have degenerated this nation morally.
@jansoltes97112 күн бұрын
They have had more than one hundred years to take a deep thought and realize why the Kingdom had fallen apart. Why Croats or Slovaks didn´t want to stay with them? The answer is magyarization. It was the same process (in its nature) that Poles experienced in the Russian Empire or in Prussia. The Hungarian Kingdom had never been just "Hungarian". It was a multi-ethnic country from the very beginning. If there´s something Hungarians can be traumatized about, then it´s the ethnically Hungarian regions that became parts of the new states. But not the Adriatic coast or the High Tatras. What´s so hard to understand about the fact that those nations just wanted to preserve their language and culture? And no, they were not newcomers to the Kingdom, they had been there long before Hungarians.
@marcinborek948515 күн бұрын
That was very interesting. Thank you.
@kenkeneth496417 күн бұрын
Nie potrzebujesz zdjęć z młodości , wystarczy że spojrzysz na syna. Pozdrawiam i wszystkiego dobrego w nadchodzącym nowym 2025 roku.
@milenaperkowski293216 күн бұрын
Hi, I watch your podcast always with pleasure. The moment with pasta with strawberries was super amusing. I showed this to my son. Yes, we have pasta and pierogis with strawberries and I talked about that with my Japanese friend. She couldn’t believe it.😊 She has very high opinion about Polish people. And she loves Polish bigos😮( my boys not so much)
@Aleksander-Prokopowicz17 күн бұрын
Nice to see You All. Have a Happy 2025 :)
@leno_o1716 күн бұрын
26:27 "we are like f*ing cockroaches, you'll never get rid of us" 😂😂😂
@andrzejbanas726117 күн бұрын
De verdad, eso fue mucho más divertido que esperaba.
@Ikargonczy18 күн бұрын
To było zabawne 😁
@bebokRZly17 күн бұрын
Doskonałe :D
@jozefczajkowski889818 күн бұрын
Great video, I had so much fun watching it. What game is Vigo playing on ps5? :D I don't know what game on ps5 I should buy. Greetings from Poznań.
@VigosDad17 күн бұрын
Astro Bot! super cool game!
@elakarczewska904217 күн бұрын
I wouldn't use the word 'shifty'.... it has negative connotations... it is a derogatory term rather than a complement... it implies deceit (kretactwo) rather than being resourceful...
@parmafoi406617 күн бұрын
Shifty może znaczyć też "obrotny" czy raczej "pomysłowy"?
@leno_o1716 күн бұрын
Yes
@labondek7816 күн бұрын
"Polish enginieering" od the best 😂🤣😂
@kikiv199317 күн бұрын
There's nothing like coming from a country where the Ronan Point tragedy happened-a place where prefabricated apartment blocks never caught on because engineers couldn't build them properly, even with a purchased foreign license-and then saying that Poles build things out of sticks.
@mirka17 күн бұрын
what is "Ronan Poimt tragedy" ???
@kikiv199317 күн бұрын
@@mirka kzbin.info/www/bejne/mH2WdZyoZsyli6M Ronan Point was a 22-storey tower block in Canning Town in Newham, East London, that partially collapsed on 16 May 1968, only two months after it opened. A gas explosion blew out some load-bearing walls, causing the collapse of one entire corner of the building; four people died and 17 were injured. The nature of the failure (caused by both poor design and poor construction) led to a loss of public confidence in high-rise residential buildings, and major changes in British building regulations resulted.
@jurekwoszczynski47216 күн бұрын
@@mirkaNot easy to decode, but it sounds to me like a classic british sarcasm and self-criticism. The Ronan Point Tragedy took place in Newham in East London. And indeed prefabricated houses are rare in UK.
@mirka16 күн бұрын
@@jurekwoszczynski472 Thank you, this must be the explanation.
@greggry488318 күн бұрын
Shifty does not mean capable. It's not a compliment. It's an unsult. ''(of a person or their manner) appearing deceitful or evasive''
@mirka17 күн бұрын
this is what I also thought
@WhitesAreGone17 күн бұрын
which country say it on Poland?
@leno_o1716 күн бұрын
The context might have changed over the years. It's the same as with "cunning" (or cwany)- it's actually a negative term but right now it's often used with positive connotations.
@kenkeneth496417 күн бұрын
Panowie pijcie jak Polacy .
@MonikaMazgola17 күн бұрын
Człowiek człowiekowi wilkiem a zombie zombie zombie
@ivonkwAn644313 күн бұрын
"Złota raczka"😅🤣😂...they only think, they are 🙈
@madcin117 күн бұрын
☺
@jacekchmielewski637217 күн бұрын
Thank you for the video but judging German decision-making and thought process in the last 15 to 20 years doesn’t say very much positive about their economy. Polish quality is better in most cases than German and that includes engineering.
@SpicyJourneys17 күн бұрын
Exile
@crulova377618 күн бұрын
In France they say "drunk as a Pole"
@rudaruda598118 күн бұрын
and i PL we say "franca" to describe an unpleasant, nagging disease, especially a venereal one. Or the second one > something arousing aversion, irritation, disgust, or something causing trouble. We also do not use word collaborate do describe cooperation. Why? During 2nd world war France was collaborating with Germans. :)
@piotrpilinko63916 күн бұрын
@@rudaruda5981 Nope. In Polish "franca" is another name for "syphillis" - "French disease".
@rudaruda598116 күн бұрын
@@piotrpilinko639 that what i wrote: nagging disease, especially a venereal one
@rudaruda598115 күн бұрын
@@piotrpilinko639 that's what i wrote: "nagging disease, especially a venereal one".
@anemarie555412 күн бұрын
W Polsce mówimy "Uprzejmy jak Francuz". Naprawdę chcecie się licytować na argumenty, zajmijcie się lepiej swoim upadającym krajem, bo piździ tam jak w kieleckim. Francuz piszący po angielsku, to wręcz zdrada historyczna.
@demolek2217 күн бұрын
Gdańsk przez tysiąc lat był na zmianę polski i niemiecki. To Szczecin był oryginalnie zawsze niemiecki. Pozdrowienia z Trójmiasta 😊 Szczęśliwego Nowego Roku
@renar1117 күн бұрын
Wrocław nie był zawsze niemiecki. Był czeski, polski i niemiecki na zmianę.
@demolek2217 күн бұрын
@renar11 ok, to Szczecin. Chodziło mi raczej o.ich wpis o Gdańsku. Zwłaszcza, że Gdańsk był wolnym miastem przed wojną.
@renar1117 күн бұрын
@@demolek22 "Historia Szczecina - obejmuje dzieje miasta od powstania słowiańskiej osady w I tys. n.e. po czasy współczesne. Szczecin założyli Wkrzanie na przełomie VII/VIII wieku na dzisiejszym Wzgórzu Zamkowym. Początkowo była to typowa osada rolników i hodowców, jednak wraz z rozwojem handlu i rzemiosła przebudowano ją do grodu. W takiej postaci w X wieku opisywał Szczecin Ibrahim ibn Jakub, który nazwę miejscowości zapisał jako Sadź. Szczecin był ważnym ośrodkiem kultu pogańskiego, kiedy w 1121 zdobył go Bolesław Krzywousty, który zmusił mieszkańców do chrztu. Jednak ani Polska, ani nieco później Dania nie utrzymały długo kontroli nad miastem - ostatecznie weszło ono do domeny cesarskiej. Szczecin, który otrzymał prawa miejskie w 1243, należał do głównych miast Hanzy i księstwa pomorskiego. W późnym średniowieczu w mieście zaczęła dominować ludność niemiecka - stan ten trwał aż do 1945 roku. Po wojnie trzydziestoletniej Szczecin przypadł Szwecji, która w 1720 roku utraciła miasto na rzecz Prus. W okresie wojen napoleońskich był okupowany przez Francuzów." Itd... Czyli Szczecin też nie był zawsze niemiecki, choć faktycznie był taki przez większość czasu.
@WladzioRex13 күн бұрын
Szczecin był założony przez Duńczyków
@trishcyman853818 күн бұрын
Napolean had a Polish mistress
@wilkomirgrey988918 күн бұрын
World jest kupa go...wna generalnie i to nie jest specjalne dobilitacja co kto mysli .
@rayan69pl17 күн бұрын
Punkt 17 - to najprawdopodobniej wzięło się od Polskich migrantów przybyłych do Australii po WW2. Mój świętej pamięci wujek po zakończeniu wojny będą w armii Andersa miał do wyboru kilka kierunków gdzie mógł pojechać (Kanada, bodaj RPA, UK albo Australia no i ewentualny powrót do Polski) i wybrał Australię. W każdej z tych destynacji wraz z możliwością migracji wiązało się to że MUSIAŁEŚ przepracować jakiś czas (nie pamiętam czy były to 2 czy 5 lat) i wiadomym było że to nie będzie łatwa praca. Wujek wybrał Australię i przez parę lat pracował na budowie lotniska w Sydney. Pewnie było wielu mu podobnych, a jako że wykonywali ciężką pracę to i zrobił się z tego w jakimś stopniu dobry PR
@marek764117 күн бұрын
Wrocław and Szczecin were German cities before WWII
@Polans-gd17 күн бұрын
and before were German were Polish
@katarzynaherman481417 күн бұрын
Lwów, Stanisławów, Tarnopol were Polish
@marek764117 күн бұрын
@@Polans-gd no… there was no Poland before
@renar1117 күн бұрын
@@marek7641where did you get your wrong "knowledge" from?
@marek764117 күн бұрын
@ w którym roku istniała Polska i Wrocław i Szczecin był Polski. Proszę powiedz