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Page "Cinema of Poland" ¶ 13
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Polish and animated
Soon Polish artists started experimenting with other genres of cinema: in 1910 Władysław Starewicz made one of the first animated cartoons in the world-and the first to use the stop motion technique, the Piękna Lukanida ( Beautiful Lukanida ).
* Przygody kota Filemona Filemon, a cat in Polish animated cartoon.
Another French / Polish stop motion animated series was Colargol ( Barnaby the Bear in the UK, Jeremy in Canada ), by Olga Pouchine and Tadeusz Wilkosz.
* Tango ( 1980 film ), an animated film by Polish director Zbigniew Rybczyński
In the early 1980s, Murdoch provided the English narration for the Polish animated version of The Moomins, from the classic series of books by Tove Jansson.
The Cybersix animated television series debuted in Canada and Argentina on September 6, 1999, and was subsequently dubbed for French, Japanese, Malaysian, Polish, South American, Spanish and Thai viewers.
Category: Polish animated films
* Dixie ( animated series ), Polish animated TV series
Bolek and Lolek are two Polish cartoon characters from the TV animated series by the same title ( Bolek i Lolek in Polish ).
Of all the Polish animated cartoons Bolek and Lolek ranks as number one all-time favorite.
Category: Polish animated television series
A sculpture of Krtek in: pl: Ogród Bajek w Międzygórzu | Ogrodzie Bajek w Międzygórzu, PolandThe Mole ( in the Czech original called Krtek, or Krteček ( little mole ); Slovak Krtko ; German Der kleine Maulwurf ; Hungarian Kisvakond ; Polish Krecik ; Finnish Myyrä ) is an animated character in a series of cartoons, created by Czech animator Zdeněk Miler in 1956.
Fallen Art ( Polish Sztuka spadania ) is the name of a 6-minute, animated short film written and directed by Tomasz Bagiński.
Category: Polish animated films

Polish and .
To Serenissimus such tribes as the Cossacks of the Don or those ex-bandits the Zaporogian Cossacks ( in whose islands along the lower Dnieper the Polish novelist Sienkiewicz would one day place With Fire And Sword ) were just elements for enforced resettlement in, say, Bessarabia, where, as `` the faithful of the Black Sea borders '', he could use their presence as bargaining points in the Czarina's territorial claims against Turkey.
His visit to Warsaw, Poland, after the Russian journey in the summer of 1959 was expected to win the Polish vote which, in several cities, is substantial.
To him, Andrei Androfski had always been the living symbol of a Polish officer.
`` For a time I thought of trying to reach the Free Polish Forces, but one thing led to another.
He was a square brick of a man with a moon-round face and sunken Polish features.
The moving of millions of the German master-race, from the very heart of Junkerdom, to make room for the Polish Slavs whom they had enslaved and openly planned to exterminate was a drastic operation, but there was little doubt that it was historically justified.
The issue was acute because the exiled Polish Government in London, supported in the main by Britain, was still competing with the new Lublin Government formed behind the Red Army.
There was the Polish Revolution which we misunderstood and then helped guide along a course favorable to Soviet interests.
The Polish song and dance company called Mazowsze, after the region of Poland, where it has its headquarters, opened a three-week engagement at the City Center last night.
A decade and a half later, the Polish anthropology student, Bronisław Malinowski ( 1884 – 1942 ), was beginning what he expected to be a brief period of fieldwork in the old model, collecting lists of cultural items, when the outbreak of the First World War stranded him in New Guinea.
The alphabet in the Polish language contains 32 letters.
A Polish journalist's account of Portuguese withdrawal from Angola and the beginning of the civil war.
He was part of an aristocratic Polish family whose members had worked as mathematicians, scientists, and engineers for generations.
He learned the Polish language at home and the Russian language in schools ; and having a French governess and a German governess, he became fluent in these four languages as a child.
* 1915 – Tadeusz Kantor, Polish painter, set designer and theater director ( d. 1990 )
* 1930 – Michał Życzkowski, Polish technician ( d. 2006 )
* 1969 – Followers led by Charles Manson murder pregnant actress Sharon Tate ( wife of Roman Polanski ), coffee heiress Abigail Folger, Polish actor Wojciech Frykowski, men's hairstylist Jay Sebring and recent high-school graduate Steven Parent.
This coincided with the withdrawal of the Polish contingent in Iraq.
* 1920 – Polish – Soviet War: the Battle of Warsaw begins and will last till August 25.
In Poland Bolesław Limanowski thought deeply about Agrarianism and worked out an eclectic program that fit Polish conditions.
The antitrinitarian wing of the Polish Reformation separated from the Calvinist ecclesia maior to form the ecclesia minor or Polish Brethren.
* 1901 – Stefan Wyszyński, Polish cardinal ( d. 1981 )
* 1773 – Stanisław Konarski, Polish writer ( b. 1700 )
After the Communists took control in the 1940s Polish scholars were safer working on the Middle Ages and the early modern era rather than contemporary history.

Polish and g
A large number of Polish film directors ( e. g., Agnieszka Holland and Janusz Kamiński ) have worked in American studios.
Whilst the English term resembles the French marbre, most other European languages ( e. g. Spanish mármol, Italian marmo, Portuguese mármore, German, Norwegian, Danish and Swedish marmor, Armenian marmar, Dutch marmer, Polish marmur, Turkish mermer, Czech mramor and Russian мрáмор ) follow the original Greek.
According to German author Andreas Kossert Polish parties were financed and aided by the Polish government in Warsaw, and remained splintergroups without any political influence, e. g. in the 1932 elections the Polish Party received 147 votes in Masuria proper.
Old Prussian contained loanwords from Slavic languages like Polish and Russian ( e. g., Old Prussian curtis " hound ," just as Lithuanian kùrtas, Latvian kur ̃ ts come from Slavic ( cf.
Russian / Ukrainian хорт, khort ; Polish chart ; Czech chrt ), as well as a few borrowings from German, including Gothic ( e. g., Old Prussian ylo " awl ," as with Lithuanian ýla, Latvian īlens ) and even Scandinavian languages.
Despite the name, reverse Polish notation is not exactly the reverse of Polish notation, for the operands of non-commutative operations are still written in the conventional order ( e. g. "/ 6 3 " in Polish notation and " 6 3 /" in reverse Polish both evaluating to 2, whereas " 3 6 /" in reverse Polish notation would evaluate to ½ ).
usually only in discrete Czech and Polish local names for the individual mountain ranges e. g. Karkonosze / Krkonoše appear, see Subdivisions above.
In Polish, a word / phrase can be brought to the front or, less commonly, put to the back of a sentence or clause to add emphasis e. g. " Roweru ci nie kupię " ( I won't buy you a bicycle ), " Od piątej czekam " ( I've been waiting since five ).
In Polish, the word jankes can refer to any US citizen, has little pejorative connotation if at all, and its use is somewhat obscure ( it is mainly used to translate the English word Yankee in a less formal context, e. g. in a movie about the American Civil War ).
Not all languages have a passive voice, and some that do have one ( e. g. Polish ) don't allow the indirect object of a ditransitive verb to be promoted to subject by passivization, as English does.
Some other traditions ( e. g., Polish heraldry ) are less restrictive — allowing, for example, all members of a dynastic house or family to use the same arms, although one or more elements may be reserved to the head of the house.
A number of Polish intellectual figures have also been Tatars, e. g. the prominent historian Jerzy Łojek.
Article 23 was rewritten and it can still be understood as an invitation to others ( e. g. Austria ) to join, although the main idea of the change was to calm fears in ( for example ) Poland, that Germany would later try to rejoin with former eastern territories of Germany that were now Polish or parts of other countries in the East.
The addition of the ' g ' and the accompanying shift in stress to the second syllable ( i. e. ' Mu-SÓRK-ski '), sometimes described as a Polish variant, was supported by Filaret Mussorgsky's descendants until his line was extinguished in the 20th century.
* Category III: Persons of German descent who had become partly " polonized ", e. g., through marrying a Polish partner or through working relationships ( especially Silesians and Kashubians ).
*-im /-ym Used for masculine and neuter singular adjectives, e. g. polski język (" Polish language ") → w polskim języku (" in the Polish language ")
The Polish authorities, supported by the public ( e. g. the “ explicitly anti-German ” Związek Obrony Kresów Zachodnich ), initiated a number of measures to further Polonization.

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