Many different companies produce Polish-English dictionaries. Some of the most prominent include Oxford, Longman, and Cambridge. You can purchase a dictionary through an online book store.
In Polish the word 'slownik' means dictionary, 'polsko' means Polish and 'angielski' means English, so the phrase 'slownik polsko angielski' translates to Polish-English Dictionary.
There are a few ways that one could translate the phrase 'slownik angielsko polski' into English. The phrase could be translated as "dictionary English Polish" or the phrase could be meant to mean "English to Polish dictionary".
A web site called Lingvo Soft Online, or Lingvozone, provides among its services a English to Polish dictionary. They also have many other language tools.
Babylon is a great place to go to translate English into Polish. Other ways to obtain translation from English to Polish is Google online translator and the Bab la dictionary. Systransoft has an excellent English to Polish translation service.
The Polish language has around 300,000 words in its dictionary.
Polish Biographical Dictionary was created in 1935.
The Polish Biographical Dictionary was created in 1992.
C. M. Schwarz has written: 'English Polish Learner's Dictionary'
There is no such word "sedes" in the English language dictionary or encylopedia. However, there is a Polish Punk Rock band by the name of "Sedes".
well i am polish and you should first get a dictionary and learn all the words and you talk polish
Jacek Fisiak has written: 'A bibliography of writings for the history of the English language' -- subject(s): Bibliography, English language, History 'Polish-English, English-Polish dictionary / Jacek Fisiak ... [et al.]' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Polish, English, English language, Polish language 'Contrastive Linguistics: Prospects and Problems' -- subject(s): Congresses, Contrastive linguistics 'An introductory English-Polish contrastive grammar' -- subject(s): Comparative Grammar, Polish, Polish language, English language, English 'Historical Dialectology' -- subject(s): Historical linguistics, Dialectology, Congresses 'Linguistic change under contact conditions' -- subject(s): Linguistic change, Languages in contact 'Historical Syntax (Trends in Linguistics: Studies and Monographs)' -- subject(s): Comparative and general Grammar, Historical linguistics, Congresses, Syntax
No, the noun 'dictionary' is a common noun, a general word for a book of an alphabetical listing of words of a given language or words relating to a particular subject; a word for any dictionary of any kind.A proper noun is the name or title of a specific person, place, or thing; for example, Webster's American English Dictionary or The Great English-Polish Dictionary by Prof. Marcin Milkowski, Ph.D. and Prof. Dariusz Jemielniak, Ph.D.