Polish settlers predominantly settled in towns such as Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland, and Buffalo in the United States, and in cities like Toronto and Winnipeg in Canada during periods of mass migration. These areas offered job opportunities in industries like manufacturing and agriculture, attracting many Polish immigrants looking to start a new life in a foreign land.
Polish in Polish is "Polski".
The polish word for Polish is: Polski.
No. 'Polish', as in a person from Poland, is pronounced "POE-lish". The other 'polish', as in shoe polish, is pronounced "PAW-lish".
Dziadek is Polish for grandfather
"exuse me" in Polish is "przepraszam"
First Polish settlers came to Jamestown in 1608.
not a clue.
to eat pie
Polish and Russian Jews settled on the East Coast at first, and later, many moved west.
they came and and built some towns and it impacted the land
Germans,Polish,Czech,Mexican,french,and a few more.
Most large super markets will have a polish food aisle . Also there are alot of polish shops in many larger towns . There is always the local deli they should stock various meats and treats that your mother in law will know .
Everything about nail polish has to do with chemistry. The chemicals that make up nail polish bond together and react with one another. The formula/recipe had to be perfected and someone had to know the time it would take for particles to settle and dry.
it makes the dust unable to settle as the dust is attracted to the static of the sofa when a material is rubbed against it. With the antstatic it is not attracted to the sofa and will not settle
Yes, nail polish is considered a suspension in chemistry because it is a mixture of insoluble particles (pigments) suspended in a liquid solvent. When nail polish is left to sit for a while, the pigments settle at the bottom of the bottle, demonstrating the characteristic property of a suspension.
They mostly settled in rural areas, agriculture being their trade, but Texas was also an area where many Poles settled. There were (and are) some Polish enclaves, such as Cicero in the Chicago area.
Prevailing winds are west to east, so wealthier people would settle west to be upwind of the smoke and stench of the crowded cities.