It’s pronounced “Stefan Wloka”
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It’s pretty close to how you would pronounce that in German if you read it for the first time
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You are right with both.
Correction: “Vrots-waff”. Ł, ł sounds the same as W, like in “why”.
Low effort.
At least pick some real sounding ones, like “Przemysław Mądrzykowski”, or something…
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Party-disappearance-feelings? Or “Feeling of party fading” Man the Germans have a word for everything! But seriously any real words compounded together that make anything near to sense, is a word in German.
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I’d like to buy a vowel
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And the optometrist asked him if he could read the last line of the eye chart, to which he replied “Read it? That’s my wife’s maiden name”
Once I met a Slovak guy with clearly polish surname, so I asked him wether he had polish ancestors. He genuinely didn’t get why would I think something like that…
Maybe because Slovak and Polish are both West Slavic languages? So they are similar.
As a west Slav (Moravian) myself, I’m usually able to distinguish these two, especially in written form. The meme shows the characteristics of polish quite realistically.
Sir, would you like a side to vowels to go with that consonant clusters?
“How do you spell that?”
“T-H-A-T”
Stół z powyłamywanymi nogami
W Szczebrzeszynie chrząszcz brzmi w trzcinie
I Szczebrzeszyn z tego słynie
wół go pyta:
For a native Ukrainian, this is just a pattern matching between Latin and Cyrillic
How I read it: Стой с … ногами
The first words out of my new coworker’s mouth were about Robert Lewandowsky.
Never in doubt.
Just call me Steve.
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