Below are 5 tips that will help you take care of the texts on your website without incurring additional costs .
Read the documentation
After learning the basics of HTML (e.g. from a beginner's manual), you've probably matured over time to reach for W3C recommendations or standards published in MDN (Mozilla Developer Network). These are reliable sources where you can learn details about constructing HTML, CSS, and other documents. What about the Polish language? You can look for language rules in printed dictionaries, but if you don't have them - no problem! You can find rules for spelling and punctuation on the PWN Polish Language Dictionary website:
PWN Clinic
It's worth spending a little more time at least once and reviewing all the rules available there, so that later - even if your memory fails you - you'll know what information is there and where to look for help. Thanks to this, I didn't have malta telemarketing data to wonder whether I was writing in HTML or in HTML :
PWN Clinic
Check the meaning of words
If you have a shadow of a doubt whether a given word really has the meaning you suspect it has – just check it, for example, on the aforementioned page of the Dictionary of the Polish Language. You will learn from there that to commit means:
1. «zrobić coś złego»
2. żart. «napisać lub skomponować jakiś utwór»
That's why you shouldn't write in your portfolio that you've made a new website - unless, as part of creative marketing, you've created a web monster that only has a chance to exist thanks to plebiscites for the worst website.
You can also use Wiktionary for this purpose :
Wiktionary
Search for synonyms
Avoid repeating words in close proximity to them. If you have trouble finding synonyms, use a thesaurus . This way you don't have to repeat information about creating the page again or resort to making a mistake . Write that you have implemented or launched it .
Synonimy.pl
Be skeptical about the synonyms you can use in every situation, and if you have any doubts, check their meaning . So don't use synonyms thoughtlessly, because you can't make up a website

Check the frequency of use, context of words and declension
Web developer or web developer ? If dictionaries don't give you the answer - check how people write. How to do that? Google Trends comes with the answer :
Google Trends
Web developer definitely wins , so that's the form I use in my signature. If linguists say otherwise in the future, I'll probably change my signature.
Most often, however, we are able to find the word in the Dictionary of the Polish Language, the Corpus of the Polish Language and Wiktionary.
The corpus is a collection of both literary texts and spoken statements, websites, advertisements, instructions… - everything that contains words. We can find real examples of the use of a word and see in which collocations it occurs most often: