Dzierzon [JEER-ZON]
The Polish name Dzierzon is pronounced as "JER-zawn." The "Dz" is pronounced like the English "J" sound, and the "rz" is pronounced like the French "j" or the English "s" in "measure."
Wanda. Pronounce it as: VanDa
It's Jan. Pronounce 'j' like 'y' in 'yellow'.
Zuzanna is already a Polish name. It is pronounced "Zoo-zah-nah" in Polish.
It is quite similar to the English way. You pronounce the A's in the same way, but the Ns are much more hard sounding and you pronounce them twice, so it comes out with "an-na" not "ana". Whenever there's two same letters in a word or name in Polish - you pronounce them separately, but so that it does sound rather smooth.
The Polish name "Siemieniuk" is pronounced as "shem-YEN-yook." The emphasis is on the second syllable.
Wanda. Pronounce it as: VanDa
Podgorska is Polish.
Ketch OR Ketsk It's Polish not German.
It's Jan. Pronounce 'j' like 'y' in 'yellow'.
"Nothing" in Polish is "nic" (pronounce: nits)
It is quite similar to the English way. You pronounce the A's in the same way, but the Ns are much more hard sounding and you pronounce them twice, so it comes out with "an-na" not "ana". Whenever there's two same letters in a word or name in Polish - you pronounce them separately, but so that it does sound rather smooth.
In Polish it would be phentically pronounced 'zeeviek'.
The Polish name "Siemieniuk" is pronounced as "shem-YEN-yook." The emphasis is on the second syllable.
Actually, contrary to the category that's provided, it's pronounced SESH- ka, and his name is Polish.
Actually, contrary to the category that's provided, it's pronounced SESH- ka, and his name is Polish.
nook in america. vanook in polish
The Polish word for "yes" is pronounced "tak" (pronounced like "tahk").