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  1. Modern Polish, written in the Roman alphabet, stems from the sixteenth century. It is still taught in Sunday schools and parochial schools for children. It is also taught in dozens of American universities and colleges. The first written examples of Polish are a list of names in a 1136 Papal Bull.

  2. Nov 8, 2022 · When did Polish immigrants come to America? The first Polish people to come to America are widely thought to have come at the beginning of western colonization of North America. Sources indicate that Polish settlers were among the first colonists of the Jamestown Colony in 1608.

  3. According to the 2000 United States Census, 667,414 Americans of age five years and over reported Polish as the language spoken at home, which is about 1.4% of people who speak languages other than English, 0.25% of the US population, and 6% of the Polish-American population.

    • Native: 40 million (2012), L2 speakers: 5.0 million, Total: 45 million
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  5. The roots of the Polish language can be traced back to the early Slavic tribes that inhabited the regions of present-day Poland, Belarus, and Ukraine. These tribes spoke a common proto-Slavic language, which gradually diverged into distinct Slavic languages over the centuries.

  6. Poles have lived in present-day United States territories for over 400 yearssince 1608. There are 10 million Americans of Polish descent in the U.S. today. Polish Americans have always been the largest group of Slavic origin in the United States.

  7. Jul 18, 2013 · When Poles first settled in the United States, they were accused of not wanting to assimilate, holding closely to their language, culture, and religion. In reality, many Polish immigrants could not wait to become Americans, and stereotypes around being Polish caused them shame.

  8. The Old Polish period, up to the start of the 16th century, saw the language undergo significant phonetic processes, such as the prothesis of a voiced labiodental fricative before ǫ and the palatalization of consonants before front vowels. Transition and Transformation – Middle Polish (16th to 18th Century):

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