{"version":"1.0","provider_name":"Rainbow Dash Network","provider_url":"http:\/\/rainbowdash.net\/","type":"link","title":"William (awlderpy)'s status on Monday, 24-Mar-14 03:14:54 UTC","author_name":"William (awlderpy)","author_url":"http:\/\/rainbowdash.net\/awlderpy","url":"http:\/\/rainbowdash.net\/notice\/3356954","html":"@<span class=\"vcard\"><a href=\"http:\/\/rainbowdash.net\/user\/2706\" class=\"url\" title=\"a boring guy\"><span class=\"fn nickname mention\">mushi<\/span><\/a><\/span> in Polish it works almost the same way as it does in Russian; hard consonants become softer when -i, -ie or -je is after them. Soft consonants are just, shaol we say, shorter. Only example i can think of in English is tue &quot;t&quot; in &quot;cat&quot; is hard, whilst in &quot;tree&quot; it is soft."}