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1

pomakic

Leave! (with an order of command) = Al?k
Star = Svejna
Chicken = Stinkishment
Do you do? = Koko Prishka
Stupid = Bunting
Shit = Gvuna
Watermelon = Lebenisa
Melon = Pipon
Beans = Bop
Donkey = Magarisen
Rose = Trandopel
Cups = Mug
Come = Bulka
Milk = Milko
Cow = Krava
Horse = Kon
Al fly to you (playing playing cards) = Nati Mua

This is a language that some people use to express their personality. It can contain mistakes, but it is still used by some people.

2

pomakic

If you want to talk to Ukrainians, you need to be able to speak a language that is similar to Russian and has some Slavic roots.

3

pomakic

In Edirne, I know of three different types of people. Some people speak very good words, but it's unlikely that someone who speaks Pomaka also speaks Bulgarian or Russian. The two nearby villages don't communicate with each other, but they do talk to the Pomakas. The area with the most Pomakas who know a combination of the Edirne province is in the Meriç district. Malesaf is slowly disappearing.

4

pomakic

The grandmother was chatting and laughing while traveling in Istanbul. She knows a lot of languages, including Bulgarian, Greek, Russian, Ukrainian, and Serbian. Her favorite sentence is "Anna Gulavata Castle Sola Udre," which may not be written correctly, but she has it memorized.

5

pomakic

Nadejdata Crepi is a proverb that means "Hope is what humans hold onto". It is a way of saying that people should always have hope, no matter what.

6

pomakic

The three phrases I just learned in Pomakish are: "I don't believe it without seeing", "Boil, also do not change if you cook", and "All the time is for a single moment". I won't forget them.

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