None. "Viva" is not a Polish word, although it is a name used by a popular tabloid magazine published here. I guess the name was selected to make it "foreign" – things that are foreign are still perceived as of high quality and desirability.
hmm,am not sure but yeh,like above,,live maybe
cause the use it like in cheerin an stuff folowed by the name of what they cheer for,,like viva manchester or somethin
"Viva" has no meaning in Polish. There are some phrases derived from Latin that use the word root, such as "vivat!" – a cheer meaning "long live!". The "Viva" magazine was a Polish language version of an international periodical.
first of all, polish doesn’t have v’s in its alphabet, instead it used w’s, so the word would be "wiwa" not "viva"
second of all, there is no such word as "wiwa" in the polish language, so you might be thinking of "wiwat" which you could say during toasts, meaning "cheers"
or third of all, you could be thinking of the magazine in Poland called "Viva"
None. "Viva" is not a Polish word, although it is a name used by a popular tabloid magazine published here. I guess the name was selected to make it "foreign" – things that are foreign are still perceived as of high quality and desirability.
hmm,am not sure but yeh,like above,,live maybe
cause the use it like in cheerin an stuff folowed by the name of what they cheer for,,like viva manchester or somethin
Polish has no such word ‘viva’.
I’ve never heard of viva in polish. The polish language doesn’t use "v"s. The v sound is made by w.
"Viva" has no meaning in Polish. There are some phrases derived from Latin that use the word root, such as "vivat!" – a cheer meaning "long live!". The "Viva" magazine was a Polish language version of an international periodical.
I think you mean "Wiwat."
(there is no "v" in polish, it’s a "w")
This basically means "long live"
first of all, polish doesn’t have v’s in its alphabet, instead it used w’s, so the word would be "wiwa" not "viva"
second of all, there is no such word as "wiwa" in the polish language, so you might be thinking of "wiwat" which you could say during toasts, meaning "cheers"
or third of all, you could be thinking of the magazine in Poland called "Viva"