Pchła pchle pchnęła, a ta pchła pchle pchnęła w bok
Pchła pchle pchnęła, a ta pchła pchle pchnęła w bok
A flea pushed a flea, and that flea pushed the flea aside
Why Is It Hard?
Pch is a Polish consonant cluster with no English equivalent. It requires the lips to come together (p) and immediately produce a ch sound without any vowel in between. All three key words in the main phrase begin with pch, and the sentence adds a ta (that) and w bok (aside) as the only breathing room. For non-Polish speakers this is virtually impossible; even native Poles find it a genuine speed test.
History
Pchła pchle pchnęła is one of Poland’s most compact and celebrated tongue twisters. The flea (pchła) is a classic tongue twister creature across many languages because the word for flea in Slavic languages tends to be phonetically extreme. This twister appears in Polish language primers as an example of how Polish tolerates consonant-initial words that would be unpronounceable in most other European languages.
Tips for Saying It
- Pch: close your lips for p, then force air through a ch position — all in one movement.
- Pchła (flea), pchle (flea, dative case), pchnęła (pushed) — three forms, one root.
- Practise pch-pch-pch as a rhythm exercise before attempting the full sentence.
More Polish Tongue Twisters
- Polish Tongue Twisters — full collection
- W Szczebrzeszynie — Poland’s national twister
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