Foul-mouthed Jessie is a Polish war bride who came to America after the Second World War. |
|
But I have discovered that Anton Krashny, the reclusive Polish surrealist miniaturist and sometime performance artist, is en route to St Andrews. |
|
You had Polish dance tunes like krakowiak, oberek, no wesloo, mazur, and polonez and of course polkas and mazurkas and waltzes. |
|
He had no interest in politics, but the specificity of the mazurka's Polish origins could not have escaped him. |
|
I learned a great deal about the Polish language from translating this book, and that continues to serve me well. |
|
Databases were queried and a quick web search revealed that the ponderous error message was written in Polish. |
|
The new languages include Czech, Danish, Dutch, Greek, Hungarian, Norwegian, Polish and Swedish. |
|
Go ahead and require them to shape up or start learning to train their Polish replacements. |
|
Meanwhile, statuesque blonde George, a recovering coke addict, is being blackmailed by a Polish drug dealer named Broylin Grillo. |
|
Lithuanian was considered to be a barbarous language, unworthy of religious use, so Polish was used for all official religious business. |
|
In addition to above-mentioned members of congress, two other recent Polish Americans have made their names in Washington. |
|
Other cousins, replacements for my Polish uncles, stood around the keg with cups of beer. |
|
Most countries in Europe have their own languages, be it Danish, Hungarian, Finnish, German, Polish, etc. |
|
Lively wakes are held after Polish funerals, with toasts and tributes to the deceased. |
|
Exploitation of the latest flaw is straightforward, according to Polish white hat hackers iSec, which unearthed both problems. |
|
Taking the road atlas with her, Misha got out of the lorry cab again and headed over to the white and red lorry belonging to the Polish driver. |
|
Drafted into the Polish army Majer was commended as a first class soldier in the heavy artillery regiment. |
|
There are no vegetables, and in fact the plate is colourless beyond the eerie white of these Polish dumplings. |
|
We yell these sentences out in Albanian, then in Polish, and then in Rumanian. |
|
We credit the idea that the Earth and other planets orbit the Sun to the medieval Polish astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus. |
|
|
But when free of the classroom, he transforms himself into the role of the leader of an elite corps of Polish lancers in Napoleon's army. |
|
She reads a lot, and is very thankful for the rich library in the Polish centre. |
|
Stewart was one of six children born into a working-class Polish family in New Jersey. |
|
In advance of the line of attack the Luftwaffe heavily bombed all road and rail junctions, and concentrations of Polish troops. |
|
But in recent years, store signs in Polish have been joined by signs written in Bengali and Arabic. |
|
He is the first member of his family to come to the United States from Lithuania, and speaks English, Lithuanian, Polish, and Russian. |
|
If you were Polish in 1986, for example, you made a laser printer print out the Polish alphabet. |
|
The polyglot Pope, at intervals, addressed the crowd in Romanian, Serbian, Croatian, Czech, and Polish. |
|
Given the extremely backward state of Polish agriculture, its small farming businesses are expected to die like flies. |
|
He is a little Polish man who speaks Lithuanian and who works as a pants-finisher in the ghetto district. |
|
By lunchtime, she could introduce herself in Polish, and the children could do likewise in German. |
|
The competition is in memory of Manfred Lachs, the renowned Polish educator, diplomat, jurist and space law expert. |
|
The book is innovative and does much to explain the development of a radical right wing in Polish political life during the twentieth century. |
|
But the Polish, Singapore and American interests might be useful as local bases to a predator. |
|
By contrast, there is nothing a trainload of deportees arriving at a Polish camp might have known. |
|
The parliamentary investigative commission has proved to be a test of Polish democracy. |
|
You were a beautiful but desperate Polish philologist carrying a large ray gun through the city streets. |
|
Along with Czech and Polish, it is classified as a western Slavic tongue in the Indo-European language family. |
|
Despite being unable to breathe properly or see clearly, Arthur then absolutely leathered his Polish quarter-final opponent. |
|
Finally, I was able to board the ship and find my cabin, which it appeared I was sharing with a young Polish girl, Maria. |
|
|
Suddenly, the man, who as a 16-year-old was a member of the Polish resistance movement, fell to the ground on his knees clutching his chest. |
|
Misha kept the map under her arm and walked back over to the black juggernaut, the Polish lorry driver climbing back into his cab. |
|
It has so far proved difficult to make a positive identification of the lorry driver, but he was believed to be a Polish national. |
|
The Polish economy has been under pressure and the zloty has fallen by about 10 per cent against the euro since the start of June. |
|
After an adventurous war time career in the Polish Free Forces he specialised in radiotherapy. |
|
They ruled for decades, freeing Ukraine from Polish rule and helping to defend the country from Turkish, Tatar, and other invaders. |
|
The Polish Government came to the rescue through a joint shipping company to transport materials China needed. |
|
Unlike Bierut, he advocated the adaptation of Marxism-Leninism to Polish conditions rather than the blind implementation of Stalinism. |
|
On 12 January 2003, the MV Dorine, a Polish bulk carrier flying the flag of Cyprus, berthed in Bell Bay, Launceston. |
|
The Polish zloty is the world's best-performing currency this year, gaining 16 percent against the euro and 25 percent against the dollar. |
|
The Polish Brothers screen-tested him and he looks a lot like a young George Reeves. |
|
A team of 50 Saudi doctors have successfully separated Polish conjoined twins in an operation that took 18 hours. |
|
We have invited Africans, Lithuanians and Polish along and are hoping their ethnic floats will bring some life to the parade. |
|
The British Parliament had no direct equivalent elsewhere, although the Polish Sejm and Hungarian Diet did possess points in common. |
|
A ship called the Jolly George was awaiting a shipload of arms destined for Polish troops in London's East End docks in May. |
|
The young man testified that he and Sandusky had come together over their shared Polish heritage. |
|
Polish them until they gleam with malice, wicked glee, and non-registry gifts. |
|
He was as disdainful about the modern breed of leaders as he was about the Polish intellectuals back then. |
|
It was decided to include a Polish 'tick box' as Home Office statistics show they account for around 70 per cent of migrants from new EU member states in Eastern Europe. |
|
Germany and Austria-Hungary took control of most of the country and the University of Warsaw was refounded and it began operating as a Polish university. |
|
|
A hundred years ago, during the Tsarist Russian occupation, kibitkas, or horse wagons, were leaving the Citadel's gallows filled with Polish political prisoners. |
|
To get the best out of this strange place you should really have a Mexican starter and a Polish Main course with maybe a mixture of Polish and Mexican puddings for afters. |
|
The Polish and Lithuanian leaders, assisted by a top European Union official, should try today to get both sides back to the negotiating table, and keep the protests peaceful. |
|
Polish typically interferes with the procedure by creating an impermeable barrier on the nail bed. |
|
The large communities of people of Cypriot, Italian, Polish, and Ukranian origin to be found in many British cities are rarely thought of as constituting ethnic minorities. |
|
Polish border police fighting smugglers of people, drugs, tobacco, nuclear material and weapons are employing American Indian trackers to guard the frontier with Ukraine. |
|
Thus begins Symmetry, a Kafkaesque story of Polish prison life. |
|
In August 1939, with a single novel to his name, Gombrowicz was invited by the Polish government to sail on the maiden voyage of the ocean liner Boleslaw Chrobry. |
|
My first experience of medical tourism came last year with a woman whose Polish tummy tuck, she assured me, was a third of the price quoted in Britain. |
|
Moreover, neither the Polish government in exile nor the leaders of the Home Army condoned anti-Semitic measures. |
|
School children speak some 110 languages, and one can find bilingual education teachers in 20 different languages including Assyrian, German, Polish, Russian and Tagalog. |
|
Nicolaus Copernicus is the Latinate name of the renowned astronomer and polymath, born in 1473 to a well-placed mercantile family in the Polish town of Torun. |
|
Most of the population in this region spoke Ruthenian, an old form of Belarusian, while Polish became the language of administration and the ruling nobility. |
|
Flitz Metal Polish comes in a bottle or pre-moistened towelettes, contains no ammonia or abrasives and removes tarnish, rust, water stains, fingerprints and oxidation. |
|
Adam Mickiewicz waged a war for Polish independence on what were essentially Byronic principles. |
|
It essentially uses the award as a backchannel to decisively endorse the Polish version of the Katyn events. |
|
For aga Malarczyk, 37, one of more than 50,000 Polish citizens living in Scotland, this is a deal breaker. |
|
The Polish ruling party and the powerful Solidarity dissident movement thereupon reached a compromise which led eventually to a democratic government. |
|
But in early February 1990, the Council of Ministers adopted the proposal prepared by the OKP and forwarded it to the Sejm, the lower chamber of the Polish parliament. |
|
The education of Polish society was a goal of the nation's rulers as early as the 12th century. |
|
|
In the 19th and 20th centuries the Polish focus on cultural advancement often took precedence over political and economic activity. |
|
These factors have contributed to the versatile nature of Polish art, with all its complex nuances. |
|
At the end of the 18th century, Polish classical music evolved into national forms like the polonaise. |
|
Polish art has always reflected European trends while maintaining its unique character. |
|
The most celebrated Polish sculptors include Xawery Dunikowski, Katarzyna Kobro, Alina Szapocznikow and Magdalena Abakanowicz. |
|
Polish cities and towns reflect a whole spectrum of European architectural styles. |
|
The Palace on the Water is the most notable example of Polish neoclassical architecture. |
|
Polish literature dates back to the 12th century, and includes many renowned writers. |
|
Polish cuisine has evolved over the centuries to become very eclectic due to Poland's history. |
|
Tea remains common in Polish society since the 19th century, whilst coffee is drunk widely since the 18th century. |
|
The first Polish Formula One driver, Robert Kubica, has brought awareness of Formula One racing to Poland. |
|
Poland has made a distinctive mark in motorcycle speedway racing thanks to Tomasz Gollob, a highly successful Polish rider. |
|
During the Polish Campaign that triggered the war, it quickly established air superiority, and then air supremacy. |
|
They were bolstered by the arrival of fresh Czechoslovak and Polish squadrons. |
|
Looming as just as large a concern was the Czechoslovak eagerness to accept the aid, as well as indications of a similar Polish attitude. |
|
The Polish law developed as a mixture of French and German civil law in the 19th century. |
|
The European Aviation Safety Agency also followed the FAA's advice and grounded the only two European 787s operated by LOT Polish Airlines. |
|
Many Polish servicemen were prevented from returning to their homeland after the war by the communist regime. |
|
Polish is closely related to Kashubian, Silesian, Upper Sorbian, Lower Sorbian, Czech and Slovak. |
|
In history, Polish is known to be an important language, both diplomatically and academically in Central and Eastern Europe. |
|
|
There are significant numbers of Polish speakers among Polish emigrants and their descendants in many other countries. |
|
In the United States, Polish Americans number more than 11 million but most of them cannot speak Polish fluently. |
|
This tendency toward a homogeneity also stems from the vertically integrated nature of the authoritarian Polish People's Republic. |
|
Many linguistic sources about the Slavic languages describe Silesian as a dialect of Polish. |
|
The Polish alphabet derives from the Latin script, but includes certain additional letters formed using diacritics. |
|
When borrowing, pronunciation was adapted to Polish phonemes and spelling was altered to match Polish orthography. |
|
The Latin language, for a very long time the only official language of the Polish state, has had a great influence on Polish. |
|
Many words were borrowed from the German language from the sizable German population in Polish cities during medieval times. |
|
German words found in the Polish language are often connected with trade, the building industry, civic rights and city life. |
|
Quite a few culinary loanwords exist in German and in other languages, some of which describe distinctive features of Polish cuisine. |
|
Making a large contribution to the war effort, the Polish Armed Forces in the West was composed of army, air and naval forces. |
|
In early 1940 a Polish Independent Highland Brigade took part in the Battles of Narvik in Norway. |
|
A Polish Independent Carpathian Brigade was formed in the French Mandate of Syria, to which many Polish troops had escaped from Poland. |
|
After the German Instrument of Surrender, 1945, Polish troops took part in occupation duties in the Western Allied Occupation Zones in Germany. |
|
Anders argued that he could not advise the soldiers to return to Poland unless the Polish Government promised elections this spring. |
|
Bevin, too, wanted immediate Polish elections, but both men knew that the chances were becoming slimmer. |
|
They in turn refused to attend in protest at similar invitations not being extended to the Polish Army and Navy. |
|
The Polish Army in France, which began to be organized soon after fall of Poland in 1939, was composed of about 85,000 men. |
|
It was composed of Polish 3rd Carpathian Infantry Division, Polish 5th Kresowa Infantry Division, Polish 2nd Armoured Brigade and other units. |
|
Together with more than 50 Poles fighting in British squadrons, about 145 Polish pilots defended British skies. |
|
|
It was at this time that Stoppard became influenced by the works of Polish and Czech absurdists. |
|
Polish literature, particularly patriotic literature, was held in high esteem by the area's Polish population. |
|
The Korzeniowski family played a significant role in Polish attempts to regain independence. |
|
It has been suggested that when Conrad left Poland, he wanted to break once and for all with his Polish past. |
|
He was left with a painful sense of the hopelessness of the Polish question and an acceptance of England as a possible refuge. |
|
Conrad, who was noted by his Polish acquaintances to be fluent in his native tongue, participated in their impassioned political discussions. |
|
Conrad spoke both his native Polish language and the French language fluently from childhood and only acquired English in his twenties. |
|
In the latter part of World War II, the Royal Navy cruiser HMS Danae was rechristened ORP Conrad and served as part of the Polish Navy. |
|
The Polish Katarzyna Kobro applied mathematically based ideas to sculpture. |
|
Polish citizens living permanently abroad are entitled, but not required, to have one. |
|
Polish people make up the largest minority group by a considerable margin, and still form the bulk of the foreign workforce. |
|
Ottokar's son Wenceslaus II acquired the Polish crown in 1300 for himself and the Hungarian crown for his son. |
|
The Polish army was defeated and Warsaw surrendered to the Germans on 27 September with final pockets of resistance surrendering on 6 October. |
|
It is believed to be the White eagle shown in the Polish coat of arms and in the Serbian coat of arms. |
|
There is a notable Polish diaspora in the United States, Brazil, and Canada. |
|
The highest concentration of Polish Americans in a single New England municipality is in New Britain, Connecticut. |
|
It is estimated that over half a million Polish people have come to work in the United Kingdom from Poland. |
|
Its written form uses the Polish alphabet, which is the Latin alphabet with the addition of a few diacritic marks. |
|
The most important development in this time, however, was the polonaise, perhaps the first distinctively Polish art music. |
|
Polish folk music was collected in the 19th century by Oskar Kolberg, as part of a wave of Polish national revival. |
|
|
Though these bands had a regional touch to their output, the overall sound was a homogenized mixture of Polish styles. |
|
With the advent of the Renaissance, the Polish language was finally accepted on an equal footing with Latin. |
|
His fingerprints matched those found in the burgled house, where he had discarded an empty can of Zubr, a Polish beer. |
|
Then you have Sweden, too, burning with desire to break a lance with Russia on the question of Polish independence. |
|
The monastic shoots spread as far as Poland where they founded Gdansk, the home of goldwasser, and Cracow, the Lyon of Polish gastronomy. |
|
Unable to return to Poland at the end of World War II, over 120,000 Polish veterans remained in the UK permanently. |
|
I took a ride to the shopping strip at Belmont and Central and stocked up on herbals at three Polish New Age health stores. |
|
Had war broken out, the Polish navy was prepared to invade the Danish isles. |
|
Between 1939 and 1947 the independentists concerned themselves primarily with the welfare of the Polish majority. |
|
The Polish Renaissance lasted from the late 15th to the late 16th century and was the Golden Age of Polish culture. |
|
Russia proclaimed a Patriotic War, and Napoleon proclaimed a Second Polish war. |
|
Polish patriots wanted the Russian part of Poland to be joined with the Duchy of Warsaw and an independent Poland created. |
|
The situation reached a general crisis in late August as German troops continued to mobilise against the Polish border. |
|
The Polish army was defeated and Warsaw surrendered to the Germans on 27 September, with final pockets of resistance surrendering on 6 October. |
|
After the defeat of Poland's armed forces, the Polish resistance established an Underground State and a partisan Home Army. |
|
It must be noted that the Red Army had invaded the Second Polish Republic several hours before Polish president fled to Romania. |
|
Polish soldiers fought under their own flag but under the command of the British military. |
|
The Polish People's Army took part in the Battle of Berlin, the closing battle of the European theater of war. |
|
But it broke diplomatic relations after the Katyn massacre of Polish nationals was revealed. |
|
In February 2014, a ceremony was held at the cemetery to celebrate the 180th anniversary of Portsmouth's Polish community. |
|
|
In May 2013 Arriva entered the Polish market through its acquisition of Veolia Transport Central Europe with 840 buses. |
|
Polish migration to the United Kingdom is the temporary or permanent settlement of Polish people in the United Kingdom. |
|
Most Polish migrants arrived in the UK after the 2004 enlargement of the European Union. |
|
In the 18th century, some Polish Protestants settled around Poland Street as religious refugees from the counter reformation in Poland. |
|
Special Operations Executive had a large section of covert, elite Polish troops and cooperated closely with the Polish resistance. |
|
By July 1945 there were 228,000 troops of the Polish Armed Forces in the West serving under the high command of the British Army. |
|
Many MPs openly criticised Churchill over Yalta and voiced strong loyalty to the UK's Polish allies. |
|
The result was the Polish Resettlement Act 1947, the UK's first mass immigration law. |
|
Others settled in the British Empire, forming large Polish Canadian and Polish Australian communities. |
|
Many of these groups are still active and steps are being taken to attract newer Polish migrants. |
|
The Polish Government in London was not dissolved until 1991, when a freely elected president took office in Warsaw. |
|
The Polish people fought hard to combat communism, and for their right to liberty. |
|
Many of the Polish British community formed after the Second World War had friends and relatives in Poland. |
|
They may work legally in the UK provided they have a Polish identity card or passport and a National Insurance number. |
|
This has led to some estimates of Polish nationals in the UK being much higher. |
|
The local newspaper in Blackpool is one of a handful of British newspapers to have its own online edition in Polish called Witryna Polska. |
|
During the same month in Belfast there were seven attacks on Polish homes within ten days, in which stones and bricks were thrown at the windows. |
|
The following individuals are notable Poles who have lived in the United Kingdom, or British people of Polish ancestry. |
|
Mikhail Gorbachev, the president of the Soviet Union, credited the Polish pope with hastening the fall of Communism in Europe. |
|
The congregations were from mainstream Diocesan parishes, ethnic chaplaincies, and churches of the Polish Vicariate. |
|
|
The table does not include The White House, a replica of a Polish palace in London. |
|
Tylman also left behind a lifelong legacy of buildings that are regarded as gems of Polish Baroque architecture. |
|
The partitions came to be seen in Poland as a Polish sacrifice for the security for Western civilization. |
|
The French and German developments were further influential in Scottish, Russian, Spanish and Polish philosophy. |
|
Finnish makkara is typically similar in appearance to Polish sausages or bratwursts, but have a very different taste and texture. |
|
Large quantities of Polish apple concentrate are exported to UK, Scandinavia, and Ireland for cider production. |
|
Konrad of Masovia gave Chelmno to the Teutonic Knights in 1226 as a base for Crusade against the local Polish princes. |
|
The French and Polish governments favoured turning Memel into an international city, while Lithuania wanted to annex the area. |
|
The Polish government indicated they would comply, but instead reinforced the city with more Polish troops. |
|
It was not until the 1938 Polish ultimatum that Lithuania restored diplomatic relations with Poland and thus de facto accepted the borders. |
|
As a result of immigration, Polish is the most widely spoken language in Ireland after English, with Irish as the third most spoken. |
|
Napoleon set up the Duchy of Warsaw, a new Polish state that ignited a spirit of nationalism. |
|
In the late 19th and early 20th century, many Polish nationalist leaders endorsed the Piast Concept. |
|
Soviet leader Josef Stalin at Tehran in 1943 rejected the Jagellon Concept because it involved Polish rule over Ukrainians and Belorussians. |
|
In the aftermath of 1848, Polish, Russian, Hungarian, Italian and French political refugees came to Jersey. |
|
On 26 June, the London office of the Polish Social and Cultural Association was vandalised with racist graffiti. |
|
As a result of the partitions, millions of Polish speaking inhabitants fell under the rule of the two German monarchies. |
|
The most used immigrant languages are Turkish, Kurdish, Polish, the Balkan languages, and Russian. |
|
The Polish language, part of the West Slavic branch of the Slavic languages, functions as the official language of Poland. |
|
The German authorities engaged in a systematic effort to destroy Polish culture and national identity. |
|
|
Additionally, the Polish Stock Exchange in Warsaw is the largest and most important in Central and Eastern Europe. |
|
The Jagiellon dynasty spanned the late Middle Ages and early Modern Era of Polish history. |
|
Russia was aided in achieving its goal when the Targowica Confederation, an organisation of Polish nobles, appealed to the Empress for help. |
|
However, over time the Russian monarch reduced Polish freedoms, and Russia annexed the country in virtually all but name. |
|
They were joined by large segments of Polish society, and together forced Warsaw's Russian garrison to withdraw north of the city. |
|
A total of 2 million Polish troops fought with the armies of the three occupying powers, and 450,000 died. |
|
Meanwhile, the Polish Navy was active in the protection of convoys in the North Sea and Atlantic Ocean. |
|
Most of the Polish inhabitants of Kresy were expelled along the Curzon Line in accordance with Stalin's agreements. |
|
Among the first lakes whose shores were settled are those in the Greater Polish Lake District. |
|
Lakes have always played an important role in Polish history and continue to be of great importance to today's modern Polish society. |
|
The Polish army consists of 65,000 active personnel, whilst the navy and air force respectively employ 14,300 and 26,126 servicemen and women. |
|
The most important mission of the armed forces is the defence of Polish territorial integrity and Polish interests abroad. |
|
Polish military doctrine reflects the same defensive nature as that of its NATO partners. |
|
Polish authorities maintain a program of improving operating speeds across the entire Polish rail network. |
|
Poland has a number of international airports, the largest of which is Warsaw Chopin Airport, the primary global hub for LOT Polish Airlines. |
|
As a result, the Polish Minister of Development Mateusz Morawiecki suggested that Poles abroad should return to Poland. |
|
Polish is the official language of Poland, but it is also used throughout the world by Polish minorities in other countries. |
|
The deaf communities use Polish Sign Language belonging to the German family of Sign Languages. |
|
There are also a several thousand neopagans, some of whom are members of officially registered churches such as the Native Polish Church. |
|
Freedom of religion is now guaranteed by the 1989 statute of the Polish Constitution, enabling the emergence of additional denominations. |
|
|
State subsidised healthcare is available to all Polish citizens who are covered by this general health insurance program. |
|
The Enlightenment ended around 1822, and was replaced by Polish Romanticism at home and abroad. |
|
Adam Jerzy Czartoryski, President of the Polish National Government during the November 1830 Uprising, and a romantic poet. |
|
Aleksander Fredro, whose fables, prose, and especially plays belong to the canon of Polish literature. |
|
Adam Mickiewicz, a principal figure in Polish Romanticism, widely regarded as one of the greatest Polish and European poets of all time. |
|
Andrzej Seweryn, one of the most successful Polish theatre actors, starred in over 50 films. |
|
Examples include the boundaries between Dutch and German, between Czech, Slovak and Polish, and between Belarusian and Ukrainian. |
|
Other NHS hospitals within the borough are Chirk Community and Penley Polish Hospital. |
|
A Polish community exists in the town with a number of Polish supermarkets and restaurants in the town centre. |
|
Chicago is also a prominent center of the Polish Cathedral style of church architecture. |
|
Polish language productions for Chicago's large Polish speaking population can be seen at the historic Gateway Theatre in Jefferson Park. |
|
In 2005, Tyler was filmed in the Algarve for the Polish entertainment TV show Zacisze gwiazd, which explores the houses of actors and musicians. |
|
Poland operates the Polish Polar Station at Hornsund, with ten permanent residents. |
|
There are also sizeable minorities of other European ethnic groups, namely Spanish, Portuguese, Polish, and Greek. |
|
Other languages spoken in Italy are Ukrainian, Hindi, Polish and Tamil amongst others. |
|
The traditional Polish breakfast is a large spread with a variety of sides eaten with bread or toast. |
|
Sides include various cold cuts, meat spreads, the Polish sausage kielbasa, tomatoes, Swiss cheese, and sliced pickles. |
|
For the most part, one will not see fried meats or potatoes in a classic Polish breakfast. |
|
French Scanie, Dutch and German Schonen, Polish Skania, Spanish Escania, Italian Scania, etc. |
|
The evacuation began on 16 June, with 16,000 troops leaving for home on Georgic, Duke of York and the two Polish ships. |
|
|
This culminates with the American forces linking up with Canadian and Polish soldiers. |
|
The situation amongst the Polish partisans and the situation of the Polish partisans were both complicated. |
|
The majority of the Polish partisans in Ukraine assisted the invading Soviet Army. |
|
Few of them got mistreated or killed by the Soviets or the Polish communists. |
|
The army also perpetrated ethnic cleansing of the Polish population of Volhynia and East Galicia. |
|
The population in the Polish Carpathian Mountains extends to northern Slovakia and western Ukraine. |
|
In 1423 the Polish king commanded protection of yews in order to cut exports, facing nearly complete destruction of local yew stock. |
|
Schools where Russian or Polish are the primary languages of education exist in the areas populated by these minorities. |
|
After 1863, the Polish revolt against Russia further distracted the European powers, and ensured that they would remain neutral. |
|
They are mandatory for tracks in the British Elite League, Polish Ekstraliga, Speedway Grand Prix and Speedway World Cup. |
|
The Polish Extraleague has the highest average attendances for any sport in Poland. |
|
From 1959 until 1965 there was produced the only Polish scooter, 150 cc to 175 cc WFM Osa. |
|
The Cossacks did not shy from taking up arms against those they perceived as enemies, including the Polish state and its local representatives. |
|
The Cossacks sought representation in the Polish Sejm, recognition of Orthodox traditions, and the gradual expansion of the Cossack Registry. |
|
Confessional tensions also reflected opposing Polish and Russian political allegiances. |
|
Polish incursions were dealt a blow by the Ottomans during the 1620 Battle of Cecora, which also saw an end to the reign of Gaspar Graziani. |
|
A number of West Slavic Polish tribes formed small dominions beginning in the 8th century, some of which coalesced later into larger ones. |
|
Many Polish legends are connected with the Vistula and the beginnings of Polish statehood. |
|
Examples of clans are found in Chechen, Chinese, Irish, Japanese, Polish, Scottish, Tlingit, and Somali societies. |
|
The antitrinitarian wing of the Polish Reformation separated from the Calvinist ecclesia maior to form the ecclesia minor or Polish Brethren. |
|
|
Ethnic Germans were also sent by her in organised colonisation attempts aiming at Germanisation of conquered Polish areas. |
|
Tensions between the new administration and the ethnic German minority arose in the Polish Corridor. |
|
Volksdeutsche of statuses 1 and 2 in the Polish areas annexed by Germany numbered 1,000,000, and Nos. |
|
In some cases, individuals consulted the Polish resistance first, before signing the Volksliste. |
|
Roger is the subject of King Roger, a 1926 opera by Polish composer Karol Szymanowski. |
|
In 1940, the NKVD executed more than 6,200 Polish policemen and prisoners of war from Ostashkov camp. |
|
A group of Russian boyars signed in 1610 a treaty of peace, recognising Ladislaus IV of Poland, son of Polish king Sigismund III Vasa, as tsar. |
|
Initially, Cossacks were allied with Crimean Tatars, which had helped them to throw off Polish rule. |
|
Through the Ukrainian Academy in Kiev, Russia gained links to Polish and Central European influences and to the wider Orthodox world. |
|
The Polish government could not control the Cossacks, but was held responsible as the men were nominally their subjects. |
|
The Polish forced the Cossacks to burn their boats and stop raiding by sea, but they did not give it up entirely. |
|
He attracted support both in Russia and outside its borders, particularly in the Polish Commonwealth and the Papal States. |
|
Factions in the Polish Commonwealth saw him as a tool to extend their influence over Russia, or at least gain wealth in return for their support. |
|
On this understanding, they allowed Polish troops to enter the city and occupy the Kremlin. |
|
Russian and Polish artists have painted numerous works based on these events. |
|
Voivode is also related to state formations such as Vojvodina, Polish provinces voivodeship, and medieval provinces of Balkans. |
|
In communication with Chernigovsky, the Chinese government used Polish as the main language. |
|
Use of genitive for negation is obligatory in Slovene, Polish and Old Church Slavonic. |
|
In late 1918, a Polish government was formed and an independent Poland proclaimed. |
|
Fighting lasted until February, when an armistice was signed that left the province in Polish hands, but technically still a German possession. |
|
|
Large European American groups include those of German, British, Irish, Polish and Belgian ancestry. |
|
Similarly, the position of Kanclerz in the Polish kingdom was always held by a bishop until the 16th century. |
|
In Polish law there is no impeachment procedure defined, as it is present in the other countries. |
|
Many of them were Polish speakers and they were treated as second class citizens. |
|
In 1899 this led to a revolt in Herne of young Polish workers, who later established a Workers' Union. |
|
The followers of Socinianism were Unitarian or Nontrinitarian in theology and influenced by the Polish Brethren. |
|
As a result of the Soviet invasion of Poland in 1939, hundreds of thousands of Polish soldiers became prisoners of war in the Soviet Union. |
|
Out of the 230,000 Polish prisoners of war taken by the Soviet army, only 82,000 survived. |
|
Mr Cywinski was wounded during the 63-day struggle in 1944 between the poorly armed Polish Home Army and the German Wehrmacht. |
|
This month it announced it was reducing its role in one Polish shale gas field, and bringing in a partner, Wisent Oil and Gas. |
|
Other features include the ability to easily switch between Reverse Polish Notation and algebraic mode and undo and backspace buttons. |
|
Not surprisingly, books, chapters, and essays on Anglicisms in Polish have proliferated. |
|
This week, resident Janina Sienicka celebrated her 90th and we actually learnt how to sign Happy Birthday in Polish. |
|
Polish has, over the centuries, borrowed a number of words from other languages. |
|
Well, how about a random Polish labourer called Jozef who's sacked by Ian Beale, gets drunk and then decides to rob the Vic? |
|
My mother's favorite cousin, like her a Kashubian by birth, worked at the Polish post office of the Free City of Danzig. |
|
The Poles grew Irish potatoes, cabbages, corn, peas, soya beans, tomatoes and beetroot for the barszcz, a Polish dish. |
|
We are supported by many Russians, Byelorussians, Georgians, Lithuanians and Polish people. |
|
The Polish city of Lodz is fast becoming THE destination for party crowds and Brits seeking a cheap weekend break. |
|
At the Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry of the Polish Academy of Sciences, 61-704 Poznan, ul. |
|