EU General Italy Thread : Politics, Food, Tourism

Buba

A total creep
And Polish is soooo similar to Turkish because the coat of a black horse is "kary" (Kara-Kum, if you want to know, is Black Desert in Turkic), or Mongolian, because hero is "bohater" (Ulan Baator, capital of Mongolia, means Red Hero).
Also, a link with Italian is suspected as pomidor means tomato ...
 

TheRejectionist

TheRejectionist
And Polish is soooo similar to Turkish because the coat of a black horse is "kary" (Kara-Kum, if you want to know, is Black Desert in Turkic), or Mongolian, because hero is "bohater" (Ulan Baator, capital of Mongolia, means Red Hero).
Also, a link with Italian is suspected as pomidor means tomato ...
Considering how Italian artists, workers and more went to the PLC and before during the Renaissance it wouldn't surprise me.
 

Buba

A total creep
Considering how Italian artists, workers and more went to the PLC and before during the Renaissance it wouldn't surprise me.
Akshually ... the PLC dates to 1569, the Act of Union. Before that Poland and Lithuania were in personal, and not real union.
To continue the culinary line of discussion - up to this day the assorted vegetable used for soup stock - celery, leek, carrot, etc. are called "włoszczyzna" i.e. "italianism". Supposedly legacy of those Renaissance cultural imports under Bona Sforza :)
The wiki in Italian

and Polish
 

filipina84

Well-known member
And Polish is soooo similar to Turkish because the coat of a black horse is "kary" (Kara-Kum, if you want to know, is Black Desert in Turkic), or Mongolian, because hero is "bohater" (Ulan Baator, capital of Mongolia, means Red Hero).
Also, a link with Italian is suspected as pomidor means tomato ...
Hmm 🤔
 

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