Antiguan and Polish are the proper adjectives for Antigua and Poland.
Only if you are a citizen of Poland. If you were born in Poland, you are automatically a Polish citizen. If you were born outside Poland your Polish parent(s) could apply for Polish citizenship on your behalf. Otherwise, a substancial residency in Poland is reqiuired to apply for Polish citizenship.
Sienkiewicz Mickiewicz Chopin was partly polish
Poland is the name of a country situated in central-eastern Europe, bordering Germany, Belarus, Kaliningrad (Russia), Czech Republic, Slovakia, Ukraine and Lithuania.Polish is the name given to someone who comes from the country of Poland. It is a nationality."He was born in Poland; he is Polish.""She is Polish; she speaks Polish; she is from Poland."A person that comes from Poland is called a pole.
Polish.
The adjective derived from the word Poland is Polish.
Polish
The adjective is variously spelled as Praguean or Praguian, often referring to the Prague School/ Prague Circle of Linguistics, rather than the city of Prague in Poland. The demonym for a resident of Prague (noun) is Praguer.
The noun polish is a common noun, as in "I am going to use some polish." The word polish is also a verb, as in "I will polish my shoes." The noun Polish is a proper noun as a word for the language of Poland, "They speak English and Polish." A proper noun is always capitalized. As an adjective, Polish is a proper adjective as in "They are a Polish family." A proper adjective is always capitalized.
The word "Polish" (capitalized) is a proper adjective referring to something or someone from Poland. The word polish can be a verb (to clean, smooth, or shine) or a noun (a substance used to polish). The adjective would be polished or polishing.
Antiguan and Polish are the proper adjectives for Antigua and Poland.
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.
No. Polish can be a verb, as in to polish a penny (clean or brighten a penny). Polish can be an adjective, as in "That man is Polish." Polish is used to describe people from Poland.
Wrong. Polish is an adjective, not a noun.
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.
Only if you are a citizen of Poland. If you were born in Poland, you are automatically a Polish citizen. If you were born outside Poland your Polish parent(s) could apply for Polish citizenship on your behalf. Otherwise, a substancial residency in Poland is reqiuired to apply for Polish citizenship.
The word polish is a regular verb. Get a clean rag and polish the furniture. (polish = verb)Polish is also a noun. She covered the tabletop with furniture polish. (polish = noun)Not to be confused with the proper noun Polish.