1A native or inhabitant of Kashubia, a region of Poland west and north-west of Gdansk.
卡舒比人;卡舒比居民(卡舒比为波兰的一个地区,位于格但斯克西部和西北部)
Example sentencesExamples
It should also be added that the Kashubians have never wanted to separate themselves from Poland.
They weren't sympathetic to Kashubians because they always helped each other and they got on with Jews.
This has awakened my interest in lesser-known Slavic peoples such as the Sorbs, Kashubians and Masurians.
In order for this to happen, the Kashubians would have to become strong in thought and spirit.
Under German rule some of the Kashubians were converted to Protestantism, as were the Mazurians in East Prussia.
2mass nounThe Western Slavic vernacular language spoken by about 200,000 people in Kashubia. It is closely related to Polish.
卡舒比语(约有200, 000卡舒比人使用的一种与波兰语关系密切的西斯拉夫土语)
Example sentencesExamples
The first printed documents in Kashubian date from the end of the 16th century.
As a result, Kashubian is increasingly heard in churches.
Some 100,000 consider Kashubian their mother tongue and speak it to varying degrees.
adjectivekəˈʃuːbɪən
Relating to Kashubia, its people, or their language.
(与)卡舒比(有关)的;(与)卡舒比人(有关)的;(与)卡舒比语(有关)的
Example sentencesExamples
There are also some Kashubian speakers in Canada.
The Kashubian tales again would naturally be pressed into the service of the surrounding Germans.
‘He closed his business, got his wife into the car and drove a great distance across Poland to where we were, visiting a Kashubian fishing village on the Hel Peninsula,’ Ray says.
In Kashubian tradition the borders between everyday life and work and folk art are blurred.
The Museum, whose aim is to document the cultural development of Kashuby and Pomerania over the ages, collects Kashubian and Pomeranian literature.