p pa pb pc pd pe pf pg ph pi pk pl pm pn po pp pr ps pt pu pv pw px py

Перевод: Pomeranian speek Pomeranian


[прилагательное]
померанский;
[существительное]
шпиц


Тезаурус:

  1. It has been estimated that in the years 1877-;1904 70 per cent of Pomeranian farmland was held in large estates and only 30 per cent in peasant smallholdings of various kinds: about two-thirds of Pomeranian farmers were smallholders living in the most appalling poverty; their assets were non-existent or too small for them to think of trekking westwards to look for factory work; they were too poor to pay cash for their land, and too impoverished for any bank to risk giving them a loan.
  2. The confusion and lack of leadership among the Pomeranian and Danzig Poles - and the almost total failure of the Polish peasantry to identify the Polish cause as their own - can be seen in the Pomeranian response to the 1794 Polish uprising, led from Krakw by Tadeusz Kociuszko.
  3. In 1772, when Frederick had admitted to the Danzig Chamber that the population of Pomerania was mainly Polish, it is estimated that the German speakers formed only about 13 per cent of the Pomeranian noble element.
  4. In 1876 he said the nationality problem in Eastern Europe was not "worth the healthy bones of a Pomeranian musketeer".
  5. He made the Poles on his territory pay double the level of taxes paid by Germans, encouraged the Poles to sell up and move out and refused to rent out Royal Estates to Poles, declaring that he would rather see Danzig merchants working Pomeranian soil.
  6. The two social groups had almost nothing in common: they lacked any common shared sense of a Polish past; they did not share a sense of common identity; and historically and geographically Warsaw was far too remote, and contact with it too inconsistent, ever to exert any power over the Pomeranian peasant imagination.
  7. "The Pomeranian Zonal Championship."
  8. The Pomeranian Junkers began to complain that the end of serfdom had released the peasants they held in moneyless bondage to wander where they would.
  9. In Pomerania the general impoverishment and the already poor Pomeranian soil meant that very few peasants could gather together enough money to buy their own farm equipment - a necessary prerequisite for purchase of their land from the estate - nor could they ever manage to garner a purchase price that was often the equivalent of over 25 years' rent.
  10. In time the Pomeranian Poles would have undoubtedly been absorbed into the German-language community as their forbears had been in previous centuries.
  11. The answer was that Pomeranian Polish identity was no threat unless the Junkers decided that it was convenient for it to be so; the identity of the Pomeranian Poles was so peripheral to Polish national identity that politically these people were no threat at all.

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