Introduction
Polish language belongs to the Slavic family, forming the West Slavic group with e.g. Czech and Slovakian languages. Being assigned to the Slavic family, Polish is cognate also to the East Slavic group (among others – Russian, Ukrainian, Belarussian) and the South Slavic group (e.g. Serbo-Croatian, Slovenian and Bulgarian). Slavic languages, deriving from Proto-Slavic, are then cognate to Baltic languages, such as Latvian and Lithuanian, both groups deriving from Proto-Balto-Slavic, which is a part of the Indo-European family – it is therefore related to e.g. Germanic, Romance and Hellenic languages.
Polish is the official language of Poland and EU, and is spoken by approx. 55 million people across the world – it is recognised as a minority language in Belarus, Czech Republic, Lithuania, Hungary, Slovakia and Ukraine.
Grammar
Polish,…
