Polish (adjective, = of Polish origin): polski;
Pole (noun, = a person from Poland or of Polish nationality): Polak (singular masculin), Polka (singular feminin), Polacy (plural masculin), Polki (plural feminin);
Poland (noun, = the country name): Polska.
Not to confuse with polish, such furniture polish or nail polish (noun): lakier.
The spelling of "Justina" in Polish is typically "Justyna."
The spelling of "Yashu" in Polish would be "Jasz."
Dave is a nickname, so to spell the elongated name David, you just replace the letter v with the letter w.Dawid
The Polish spelling of Andrew is "Andrzej."
Scarlotte (polish spelling) , Charlot, Cherlotte.
There are Polish surnames including Kowalski and Kovalski.
In Polish, "Jo Ann" can be spelled phonetically as "Jo Ann" as well, since names are often retained in their original forms. However, if you want to adapt it to Polish spelling conventions, it might be written as "Joan" or "Joanna." The pronunciation would remain similar, but the exact spelling can vary based on personal preference.
That is the spelling of the given name Kornel (also Kornél or Cornel, of Polish or Hungarian origin). The similar English name is spelled Cornell.
this is how you spell spelling in french: l'orthographe
in polish : Edward [edvard]
In Polish safety is "bezpieczeństwo".
it's not a Polish word.