Adam Łukasiak

Adam is a native Polish speaker and works as a freelance translator. He has an MA and BA in English Studies from the University of Warsaw. His passion for education and technology drives him to seek ways to enable other people to develop their language skills with the help of online resources. He works as a Language Contributor for the Duolingo Polish course and has helped develop the Grammar Challenges in Polish and other languages for Clozemaster.

The Beginner’s Guide to Polish Reflexive Pronouns and Verbs

The way reflexive pronouns work in Polish might not seem too intuitive to an English speaker. After all, English reflexive pronouns – words like oneself, himself, yourselves etc. – are only used in very specific contexts. On a basic level, reflexive pronouns are used to signal that the object of a clause is the same …

The Beginner’s Guide to Polish Reflexive Pronouns and VerbsRead More »

The No-Nonsense Guide to Polish Possessive Pronouns

The purpose of possessive pronouns – like my, your, and their in English – is indicating possession or ownership.  It may be useful to think of possessive pronouns as a cross between adjectives and personal pronouns. First, they attach to other parts of speech in order to describe them, just like adjectives do – good …

The No-Nonsense Guide to Polish Possessive PronounsRead More »

The Polish Demonstrative Pronouns “ten” and “tamten”: A Simple Guide

Demonstrative pronouns are used to point at things, usually in order to distinguish them from other things. In English, the basic demonstrative pronouns are this, that, those and these. In Polish, there are two types of pronouns. The so-called proximal demonstrative pronoun ten is used to point to things which are close to the speaker. On the …

The Polish Demonstrative Pronouns “ten” and “tamten”: A Simple GuideRead More »

Everything You Need to Know about Polish Prepositions

Prepositions are functional words used to clarify the relationship between other words in the sentence. In English, these are mostly short words like about, on or with. In Polish, just as in English, it is often nearly impossible to express even a simple thought without the help of a couple of prepositions. That’s why you …

Everything You Need to Know about Polish PrepositionsRead More »

Expand your vocabulary in another language

Get Clozemaster and take your language skills to the next level.

“Clozemaster is THE best app to learn a language after Duolingo.”

Play >

Get it on Google Play