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Professional Polish marketing translation for Tucki Tucki businesses. Brochures, websites, campaigns and product materials translated to engage your target audience.
Send us your marketing materials for a free quote. Our Polish translators adapt your message to resonate naturally with your target audience.
Marketing translation goes beyond word-for-word — we adapt your message so it sounds natural and compelling in Polish.
Accurate conversion of meaning from one language to another, maintaining the same structure and content. Best for factual marketing content, product descriptions and technical specifications.
Creative adaptation of your message for the target culture. Slogans, taglines, advertising copy and brand messaging often need transcreation to achieve the same emotional impact in Polish.
Our Polish translators will recommend the best approach based on your content type and goals.
Polish is a West Slavic language of the Lechitic group. It is spoken primarily in Poland and serves as the native language of the Poles. In addition to being the official language of Poland, it is also used by Polish minorities in other countries. There are over 50 million Polish speakers around the world - it is the sixth-most-spoken language of the European Union.
Polish is written with the traditional 32-letter Polish alphabet, which has nine additions to the letters of the basic Latin script. Polish was profoundly influenced by Latin and other Romance languages like Italian and French as well as Germanic languages (most notably German), which contributed to a large number of loanwords and similar grammatical structures. Extensive usage of nonstandard dialects has also shaped the standard language; considerable colloquialisms and expressions were directly borrowed from German or Yiddish, and subsequently adopted into the vernacular of Polish which is in everyday use.
Today, Polish is spoken by approximately 38 million people as their first language in Poland. It is also spoken as a second language in eastern Germany, northern Czech Republic and Slovakia, western parts of Belarus and Ukraine as well as in southeast Lithuania and Latvia. Because of the emigration from Poland during different time periods, most notably after World War II, millions of Polish speakers can be found in countries such as Canada, Argentina, Brazil, Israel, Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States.