An user polonès
diu…

" Zanim
Conjunció subordinada
 gosposie wypoczęły, przybyli  goście
substantiu
musiały
Verb
  się
Pronom
  więc
Conjunció subordinada
 gorączkowo  spieszyć
Verb
żeby
Conjunció subordinada
  ich
Pronom
  przyjąć
Verb
."

“Before the housekeepers rested, guests arrived; so they had to hurry frantically to receive them.”
Paraules i frases
Nou
zanim

before (earlier than the time when)

Nou
goście

nominative/vocative plural of gość

Nou
musiały

third-person plural nonvirile past of musieć

Nou
się

Nou
więc

  1. ergo, so, therefore
  2. (obsolete) in addition, as well as, too

Nou
spieszyć

  1. to hurry (to hasten; to impel to greater speed; to urge on)
  2. to hurry (to do things quickly)

Nou
ich

possessive pronoun for oni or one, namely their or theirs

Nou
przyjąć

  1. to receive, to accept (to take that what someone gives)
  2. to admit; to receive, to accept (to agree to; to consider or deem good)
  3. to admit; to receive, to accept (to be the recipient of some words and react to them positively)
  4. to receive, to take (to be the object or participant of someone else's actions, i.e. a hit)
  5. (colloquial) to receive (to react to passing the ball or puck in a manner appropriate to the rules and purpose of a given game)
  6. to take on (to agree to allow someone to work somewhere)
  7. to admit; to receive, to take in (to accept as a guest)
  8. to admit; to receive, to take (i.e. of a doctor etc., to agree to see and converse with)
  9. to admit; to receive, to take in (i.e. of a hospital, to agree to give services to)
  10. to admit; to receive, to take in (to allow temporary or permanent stay to i.e. refugees)
  11. to absorb, to take in, to soak up
  12. to take in (to give one's body some medicinal agent)
  13. to take (to react to something in a particular way)
  14. to receive, to accept (to accept something by voting or in another formally established way)
  15. to take; to accept (to accept a particular view as true (even though it is not confirmed) and proceed as if it were true)
  16. to take (to consider; to ascribe certain characteristics, to regard)
  17. to take on (to assume i.e. responsibility)
  18. to take on (to begin to have the certain qualities)
  19. mistranslation of Latin suscipient
  20. to admit; to allow; Further details are uncertain.
  21. to catch on (to become popular, widely used, or widely recognized)
  22. to take root
  23. to be accepted (to become one with an organism after transplanting)
  24. to be taken; to take, to take hold (to make someone's body resistant to something)
  25. to be hired, to be taken on
  26. to catch on, to be received (to be accepted in a new environment)

Comments