• To most Poles, Stalin's Soviet Union was first a co-conspirator with Hitler's Germany, and then a murderous occupying power.

    ECONOMIST: A testy relationship with the two big neighbours

  • He is seen by most Poles as the puppet-master of a struggling government.

    ECONOMIST: Poland

  • Like their church, most Poles are becoming more socially liberal while remaining Catholic.

    ECONOMIST: Poland

  • Most Poles hugely resent such claims, and Prime Minister Belka said after the cabinet meeting such demands were "utterly inconceivable".

    BBC: NEWS | Europe | Poland rejects reparations call

  • So when he rushed back from a Spanish holiday all tanned and wide-eyed to become prime minister, most Poles were cautiously hopeful.

    ECONOMIST: Jerzy Buzek, doughty but adrift

  • Most Poles still look west with admiration, albeit tinged with economic suspicion.

    ECONOMIST: One more push

  • Never mind that most Poles are now better off and healthier than they were when the iron curtain came down (see table 7).

    ECONOMIST: One more push

  • Most Poles concede that painful reforms are needed and that Mr Buzek's government had a strong mandate for them at the ballot box.

    ECONOMIST: Jerzy Buzek, doughty but adrift

  • Most Poles now think that capitalism has made them better off.

    ECONOMIST: Poland: An AWSome future? | The

  • If Lech wins, however, Jaroslaw would find it difficult to be prime minister, since most Poles are queasy about the idea of identical twins holding the country's two top jobs.

    ECONOMIST: Return of the right | The

  • Now I would say (and I would hesitate to guess that most Poles would agree) that 2012 Poland is a much healthier, wealthier, more democratic, and generally better place than it was in 1990.

    FORBES: Connect

  • The prospect that Mr Putin could oversee a more thorough-going union between Russia and Belarus, on Poland's eastern border, sends a few Polish pulses racing, though a lot of Poles also think it would be good if Russia's new president were to cut Belarus's eccentric leader, Alexander Lukashenka, whom most Poles despise, down to size.

    ECONOMIST: Poland and Russia

  • And surveys suggest that Poles in most age groups have become steadily more satisfied with life over the past ten years even as they have become increasingly disenchanted with their governments.

    ECONOMIST: One more push

  • Most of the language students are Poles.

    BBC: Yiddish classes are given at the Galicia Jewish Museum

  • One of the most important inputs to the production of broadband networks is rights of way permission to dig up public streets and attach cables to public utility poles which in most cases are under the control of local governments.

    FORBES: "Intervention" Is Inevitable When The Government Has A Monopoly

  • One of the most awful things was the use of scaffolding poles against police.

    BBC: Poll tax riots - 20 years after violence shook London

  • Hundreds of thousands of Estonians, Latvians, Lithuanians, and Poles were dispatched to the Gulag (most during the same timeframe as the Chechen deportation), and countries as varied as the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Bulgaria were crushed beneath the Soviet jackboot for decades.

    FORBES: Russian Oppression And Chechnya: Violence Is A Choice

  • Scattered across a 125-mile network of well-marked trails managed by the local not-for-profit Methow Valley Sport Trails Association lie aspen groves, isolated ranches, foraging mule deer, and enough slippery descents to make even the most experienced powder hounds grip tightly to their ski poles.

    BBC: Cross-country skiing in Washington��s Methow Valley

  • From the earth's poles to the tropics, from the oceans to the planet's most fertile farming regions, global warming could present daunting challenges.

    FORBES: Beyond Copenhagen

  • Judging by the most recent scorecard issued by Transparency International, an independent watchdog based in Berlin, the Poles are less corrupt than the Czechs and Latvians but more than the Hungarians, Estonians, Lithuanians, Slovenes and even Belarussians.

    ECONOMIST: Corruption in Poland

  • Ken Caldeira of Stanford University, another of the authors, reckons that it may be feasible to place sulphates in the stratosphere near the poles and thus cool the Earth in a place where global warming manifests itself most strongly, though that would scarcely please the Russians and the Canadians.

    ECONOMIST: Global warming

  • In this part of the U.S., like most of the country, all the power lines are above ground, strung between flimsy wooden poles, exactly as they were over 100 years ago.

    FORBES: The U.S. enters the 20th century: why we can't keep the electricity on

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