Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Mr. Tourel's product is not cheap by Polish standards, retailing at about $50.
The rest of the initial equity capital of about $1 million - tiny even by Polish standards - came from two Government-sponsored job development programs.
K Map Meaty Polish standards in a space with a rustic rural look.
Seventeen Polish standards were taken.
It serves cheap, unpretentious Polish standards in a location that would be the envy of many upmarket eateries.
By Polish standards, Nie is outrageous.
Another seldom-mentioned change in the Polish standard of living is the increase in dollar purchasing-power brought about by the newly stable zloty.
There's also a cheaper snack menu with Polish standards such as bigos (sauerkraut dish, see boxed text, p61; 5zł).
With the exception of Rumania's, the Polish standard of living is already at the bottom of the East bloc.
While by Polish standards Marki is a relatively young town, with approximately 23,000 residents, it is one of the fastest growing cities in the Masovian province.
The tour sponsors hope to earn a profit by keeping expenses low (a $35 per diem, giddily high by Polish standards, and intercity travel by bus).
With a group of friends, my wife, Sheelin, and I dined superbly at Fukier on the Rynek, expensive by Polish standards.
Special interest was given by him to the metrology of surface layer; he contributed - in particular - to the establishment of the first Polish standard in this domain.
The town of Wielun was clean and prosperous by pre-war Polish standards, and Wielun's Jewish community was known to be well educated.
"According to Polish standards, the situation with freedom of the press here is lower, though not that much lower," said Mr. Tkachenko, the head of a new private channel, Noviy Canal.
The biography is considered controversial by Polish standards because its warts-and-all treatment, more characteristic of the contemporary Anglo-Saxon approach to biography, marks a departure from the typical Polish approach to biography as quasi-hagiography.
Even by Polish standards, Mrs. Johnson is fiercely anti-Communist, a woman who once condemned compatriots like Zbigniew Brzezinski and John Cardinal Krol of Philadelphia for shaking hands with Wojciech Jaruzelski.
A certain young man from Poland was sentenced in Great Britain to life imprisonment for rape, in a trial based on circumstantial evidence, which took place under the influence of a strong smear campaign in the press and which, in the opinion of some observers, did not meet Polish standards, at any rate, for a fair trial.