Views: 0
Welcome to Poland! Would you like some extra consonants?

20
12 comments
Like
Comment
Share
12 comments
- Didn’t see it, but making fun of pileups of Polish consonants is a venerable tradition.
- Like
- Reply
- 4 h
- It’s easy to pronunce, honesty!
1
- Like
- Reply
- 4 h
- I agree!
1
- Like
- Reply
- 4 h
- Yes, I know, Welsh definitely takes the prize.
- Like
- Reply
- 4 h
View 1 more reply- And here’s some tourist advertising from another town, made famous by the tongue-twister “W Szczebrzeszynie chrzaszcz brzmi w trzcinie”:
- Like
- Reply
- See translation
- 4 h
- Wrzeszcz! (German: Langfuhr), near Gdansk (Danzig), where Günter Grass was born in 1827.
1
- Like
- Reply
- 4 h
- applies to Poland as well