I don't know is it even long, a normal u and ó sound just the same for me. It's like rz and ż, it's the same just depending on the other letters in a given word. Like it's always -ów and always -uj.
I also once told you Ukrainian is just like Russian, but it's full of Polish words, I just don't notice them when hearing or even talking in our respective languages. Like the Ukrainian (and Belarusian) yes is the Polish tak and not the Russian da.
Honestly the most different is the general eastern "singing" accent, especially when it's a woman talking. The Poles talk hard, I would say "almost like the Germans" but not quite.
The Czechs talk really silly, like Polish children. I don't even know how the Slovaks talk, maybe the Czech but like ours Highlanders, which is something like yelling even when they're being quiet. You almost never even hear of Slovakia or the Slovaks in any context.
Adopting a national language? Wait till you find out what happened in the South of France.
The long 'u' is quite an unexpected pronunciation for 'Lwow'.
I know what happened, the crusades.
I don't know is it even long, a normal u and ó sound just the same for me. It's like rz and ż, it's the same just depending on the other letters in a given word. Like it's always -ów and always -uj.
Polish is hard af, I know.
I also once told you Ukrainian is just like Russian, but it's full of Polish words, I just don't notice them when hearing or even talking in our respective languages. Like the Ukrainian (and Belarusian) yes is the Polish tak and not the Russian da.
Honestly the most different is the general eastern "singing" accent, especially when it's a woman talking. The Poles talk hard, I would say "almost like the Germans" but not quite.
The Czechs talk really silly, like Polish children. I don't even know how the Slovaks talk, maybe the Czech but like ours Highlanders, which is something like yelling even when they're being quiet. You almost never even hear of Slovakia or the Slovaks in any context.