Hungarian grammar
Encyclopedia
Hungarian grammar is the study of the rules governing the use of the Hungarian language
, a Uralic language spoken in Hungary
and in adjacent areas of the seven neighboring countries, parts of which belonged to Hungary before 1920. Hungarian grammar possesses an extremely complex structure.
, meaning the subject does not have to be explicitly stated. Word order is determined not by syntactic roles, but rather by pragmatic
factors. Emphasis is placed on the word or phrase immediately preceding the finite verb
.
A sentence usually consists of four parts: topic, focus, verb and the rest. Any of the four parts may be empty. The topic and the rest may contain any number of phrases but the focus may contain at most one phrase.
The topic contains a phrase or phrases which the speaker supposes as known and which is used for introducing a topic that the statement will be about (cf. "as far as X is concerned, ..."). The focus attracts the attention to an element of the event which is either supposed as unknown or it may be a refutation to a possible opposing belief. It excludes the validity of the statement for all other individuals in question ("it was X and nothing else that...").
If a focus is present, the verbal prefix will be put after the verb (vitt el instead of elvitt). If there is no verbal prefix, there may be ambiguity in writing because the phrase preceding the verb may be either a topic or a focus. For example, in the sentence Éva szereti a virágokat ("Eve likes flowers"), Éva may be a topic and the sentence may be neutral, or Éva may be a focus and the sentence may emphasise that it's Eve who likes flowers. Example sentences and their interpretations follow:
. Most grammatical information is given through suffixes
. For example: "at the table" = az asztalnál (space relation), "at 5 o'clock" = öt órakor (time relation). There is also one grammatical prefix (leg- for superlatives).
Note: The stem-final a and e, as well as o and ö in foreign words, are lengthened before suffixes, e.g. alma → almát, mese → mesét, piano → pianót, Malmö → Malmőt. (Short o and ö cannot occur at the end of Hungarian words.) Short i, u, ü retain their length, e.g. ami → amit, kapu → kaput, menü → menüt.
The vowels which form parallel pairs or triads in harmonic suffixes are:
As it is shown, the members of these pairs/triads mostly agree in height and length
but differ in backness. (An exception is the pair á/é where á (open front unrounded vowel) is categorised as back.)
In the case of o vs. e and ö
and the case of a vs. e there appears a difference in roundedness, too.
Notes:
Minor variations:
Note: The long vowels á/é, ú/ű and ó/ő are not used as link vowels.
Therefore, their differences are:
This difference often disambiguates meanings, e.g. jöttek means "they came" (past) and jöttök means "you [pl.] come" (present).
An extreme example is the longest Hungarian word 'megszentségteleníthetetlenségeskedéseitekért' (means 'due to your continuous pretending to be indesecratable'. This word contains mass of inflexions, prefix, suffix, etc. The core of the word is 'szent', meaning "saint.")
Note: the accusative suffix following the stem or following other suffixes shows the same difference, except for the six different forms for the six persons:
For the full list of such postpositions, see postpositions with personal suffixes.
This internal structure affects how they are used with pronominal forms (see above).
There is also a suffix, -va/-ve, which is used to derive adverbs from verbs. Its nearest English equivalent is the -ing form functioning as a participle
(rather than a noun). Example:
Such participles (note the adverbial
usage) are referred to by term “adverbial participle
” (distinguished from adjectival participle
).
adjectives and adverbs are formed by adding -abb/-ebb/-bb to the adjective stem, e.g. gyors ("quick"), gyorsabb ("quicker"), gyorsan ("quickly"), gyorsabban ("more quickly").
To state the thing which is being compared with (like English "than"), Hungarian uses the noun suffix -nál/-nél or the preposition mint. (Note, mint is the only preposition in Hungarian.) For example gyorsabb a szélnél or gyorsabb, mint a szél ("faster than the wind").
Superlative
adjectives and adverbs are formed by adding the prefix leg- to the comparative, e.g. a leggyorsabb ("the quickest"), a leggyorsabban ("the most quickly").
Notes:
There are also some which are used only for time, e.g.:
There are 2 ways of expressing how long ago something happened:
Times can be given by just the numbers, but this is not usual in speech, e.g.:
nyolc óra húsz ( literally "eight hour twenty") or nyolc húsz ( literally "eight twenty").
In speech the half and quarter hours are expressed by what fraction of the time to the next hour has elapsed.
These can be written using fractions, e.g.:
These are abbreviated in movie programmes as n9, f9 and h9 (with the initial letters of the fraction names).
The times in between these are expressed in relation to the next or previous quarter hour, e.g.:
...or fél kilenc lesz tíz perc múlva ( literally "it will be 8.30 in 10 minutes' time")
These are different when they refer to a time in the past or future:
For a period of time in the past, present or future:
These two structures are often interchangeable.
Double negative is common with negative pronouns (like nobody, nothing, never, nowhere), see the article "Double negative" about Hungarian.
milyen? is used to ask for a description. It can be used to ask about a whole noun phrase, e.g. Milyen a tanárod? ("What's your teacher like?") or as a determiner, e.g. Milyen lakást akarsz? ("What kind of flat do you want?"). Although there is no case suffix -lyan/-lyen, this ending also occurs in ilyen ("this kind of"), olyan ("that kind of"), valamilyen ("some kind of") and semmilyen ("no kind of").
The strict three-way distinction in direction which occurs in the positional suffixes also occurs in the question words: hol? ("where?"), hova? /hová? ("where to?") and honnan? ("where from?").
hány? is used to ask questions about numbers (cf. "how many?") and mennyi? about quantities (cf. "how much?"). Where meaningful, these can take the full range of case and noun suffixes, e.g. hánnyal?, hánykor?, mennyibe?, mennyiért? hány? can also take the full range of suffixes used for numbers and quantity expressions, e.g. hányadik?, hányas?
s are expressed by intonation not by any modification to syntax or morphology.
A short positive answer to a yes/no question is often given by repeating the verb particle (or the full verb, if it has no particle) rather than by using the words Igen ("Yes"). Examples:
The negative answer to a yes/no question may include the word Nem ("No") or the negation of the requested part of the sentence or both.
s are made by adding ugye to the beginning or end of a statement. E.g. Elment, ugye? or Ugye elment? ("He has left, hasn't he?"). The latter form more strongly suggests the positive answer.
Relative clauses usually have an explicit antecedent
in the main clause, e.g. Attól félek, nem mehetek el. ("I'm afraid [of the fact that] I can't go.") However, Félek, (hogy) nem mehetek el. is also correct.
Hungarian language
Hungarian is a Uralic language, part of the Ugric group. With some 14 million speakers, it is one of the most widely spoken non-Indo-European languages in Europe....
, a Uralic language spoken in Hungary
Hungary
Hungary , officially the Republic of Hungary , is a landlocked country in Central Europe. It is situated in the Carpathian Basin and is bordered by Slovakia to the north, Ukraine and Romania to the east, Serbia and Croatia to the south, Slovenia to the southwest and Austria to the west. The...
and in adjacent areas of the seven neighboring countries, parts of which belonged to Hungary before 1920. Hungarian grammar possesses an extremely complex structure.
Syntax
Neutral Hungarian sentences have a subject–verb–object word order, like English. Hungarian is a null subject languageNull subject language
In linguistic typology, a null-subject language is a language whose grammar permits an independent clause to lack an explicit subject. Such a clause is then said to have a null subject. Typically, null subject languages express person, number, and/or gender agreement with the referent on the verb,...
, meaning the subject does not have to be explicitly stated. Word order is determined not by syntactic roles, but rather by pragmatic
Pragmatics
Pragmatics is a subfield of linguistics which studies the ways in which context contributes to meaning. Pragmatics encompasses speech act theory, conversational implicature, talk in interaction and other approaches to language behavior in philosophy, sociology, and linguistics. It studies how the...
factors. Emphasis is placed on the word or phrase immediately preceding the finite verb
Finite verb
A finite verb is a verb that is inflected for person and for tense according to the rules and categories of the languages in which it occurs. Finite verbs can form independent clauses, which can stand on their own as complete sentences....
.
A sentence usually consists of four parts: topic, focus, verb and the rest. Any of the four parts may be empty. The topic and the rest may contain any number of phrases but the focus may contain at most one phrase.
Emphasis
The tables below contain some Hungarian variations of the English sentence "John took Peter two books yesterday." Besides the verb, the sentence contains two other elements: "John", "Peter"Topics | Focus | Verb | The rest | Special meaning | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
János | tegnap | elvitt | két könyvet Péternek. | Two books were taken by John to Peter yesterday. (It was successfully completed; no special emphasis.) | |
János | tegnap | két könyvet | vitt el | Péternek. | It was two books that John took Peter yesterday. (As far as John and yesterday are concerned, it was exactly two books that he took to Peter.) |
János | tegnap | vitt el | két könyvet Péternek. | It was yesterday that John took Peter two books. (John took Peter two books sometime, but it was done specifically yesterday.) | |
János | vitt el | tegnap két könyvet Péternek. | It was John who took Peter two books yesterday. | ||
Péternek | vitt el | tegnap János két könyvet. | It was Peter to whom John took two books yesterday. | ||
János | tegnap | Péternek | vitt el | két könyvet. | John took somebody two books yesterday, but it was specifically Peter to whom he took them, not anybody else. |
Elvitt | János tegnap két könyvet Péternek. | Two books were taken by John to Peter yesterday. (The action was completed; the books are at Peter's place now.) | |||
Két könyvet | tegnap | elvitt | János Péternek. | Two books were indeed taken by John to Peter. (Perhaps something else was taken to him, too. However, the two books may not be the most important thing, e.g. John may have left Peter's documents at home.) | |
Két könyvet | vitt el | János tegnap Péternek. | John (only) took Peter two books, nothing else. |
The topic contains a phrase or phrases which the speaker supposes as known and which is used for introducing a topic that the statement will be about (cf. "as far as X is concerned, ..."). The focus attracts the attention to an element of the event which is either supposed as unknown or it may be a refutation to a possible opposing belief. It excludes the validity of the statement for all other individuals in question ("it was X and nothing else that...").
If a focus is present, the verbal prefix will be put after the verb (vitt el instead of elvitt). If there is no verbal prefix, there may be ambiguity in writing because the phrase preceding the verb may be either a topic or a focus. For example, in the sentence Éva szereti a virágokat ("Eve likes flowers"), Éva may be a topic and the sentence may be neutral, or Éva may be a focus and the sentence may emphasise that it's Eve who likes flowers. Example sentences and their interpretations follow:
Sentence | Interpretation |
---|---|
Éva szereti a virágokat. | Eve likes flowers. |
Szereti Éva a virágokat. | Eve does like flowers (even if someone doubts it). |
Éva szereti a virágokat. | Eve likes flowers (and not someone else). |
Éva a virágokat szereti. | Eve likes flowers (and not something else). |
A virágokat Éva szereti. | It's Eve that likes flowers (and not someone else, although something else may be liked by someone else). |
A virágokat szereti Éva. | It's flowers that Eve likes (and not something else). |
Morphology
Hungarian is an agglutinative languageAgglutinative language
An agglutinative language is a language that uses agglutination extensively: most words are formed by joining morphemes together. This term was introduced by Wilhelm von Humboldt in 1836 to classify languages from a morphological point of view...
. Most grammatical information is given through suffixes
Affix
An affix is a morpheme that is attached to a word stem to form a new word. Affixes may be derivational, like English -ness and pre-, or inflectional, like English plural -s and past tense -ed. They are bound morphemes by definition; prefixes and suffixes may be separable affixes...
. For example: "at the table" = az asztalnál (space relation), "at 5 o'clock" = öt órakor (time relation). There is also one grammatical prefix (leg- for superlatives).
Overview of personal endings: typical sound elements
In Hungarian, the endings are mostly common for the endings of pronouns with suffixes and postpositions, possessive endings of nouns, and the verb endings. (The accusative of pronouns is also given for comparison, though it is less regular.)Pronoun | Case/postposition stem | Noun | Verb | Typical element | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nominative | Accusative | Indefinite present | Definite present | |||
"I" etc. | "me" etc. |
"by/at me" etc. | "under me" etc. | "my flat /apartment" etc. | "I see" etc. | "I see it" etc. |
én | engem | nálam | alattam | lakásom | látok | látom |
te | téged | nálad | alattad | lakásod | látsz | látod |
ő | őt | nála | alatta | lakása | lát | látja |
mi | minket | nálunk | alattunk | lakásunk | látunk | látjuk |
ti | titeket | nálatok | alattatok | lakásotok | láttok | látjátok |
ők | őket | náluk | alattuk | lakásuk | látnak | látják |
Harmonic vowels in suffixes
Front-back vowel harmony is important in Hungarian morphophonology. Certain suffixes also distinguish between front unrounded vowels and front rounded vowels. See Hungarian phonology or vowel harmony for a more detailed explanation.Note: The stem-final a and e, as well as o and ö in foreign words, are lengthened before suffixes, e.g. alma → almát, mese → mesét, piano → pianót, Malmö → Malmőt. (Short o and ö cannot occur at the end of Hungarian words.) Short i, u, ü retain their length, e.g. ami → amit, kapu → kaput, menü → menüt.
The vowels which form parallel pairs or triads in harmonic suffixes are:
Back | Front |
---|---|
variant | |
o | e/ö |
a | e |
á | é |
u | ü |
ú | ű |
ó | ő |
As it is shown, the members of these pairs/triads mostly agree in height and length
Vowel length
In linguistics, vowel length is the perceived duration of a vowel sound. Often the chroneme, or the "longness", acts like a consonant, and may etymologically be one, such as in Australian English. While not distinctive in most dialects of English, vowel length is an important phonemic factor in...
but differ in backness. (An exception is the pair á/é where á (open front unrounded vowel) is categorised as back.)
In the case of o vs. e and ö
Close-mid front rounded vowel
The close-mid front rounded vowel, or high-mid front rounded vowel, is a type of vowel sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is , a lowercase letter o with a diagonal stroke through it, derived from the Danish, Norwegian...
and the case of a vs. e there appears a difference in roundedness, too.
Notes:
- e is used in 2 of the groups. There are no suffixes which have a/e/ö. o/e (without ö) is very rare, only used for certain 2nd person plural suffixes.
- Where i is used in a suffix, it is usually an invariant suffix. It also occurs once as a front verb suffix (paired with -ja) and in the irregular forms neki and nekik (see Cases with personal suffixes).
Suffix typology
The suffixes can be categorised into the following phonological types:- Initial consonant and no change depending on the stem ending, e.g. -ban/-ben, -hoz/-hez/-höz
- Initial v with complete preservative consonant assimilationAssimilation (linguistics)Assimilation is a common phonological process by which the sound of the ending of one word blends into the sound of the beginning of the following word. This occurs when the parts of the mouth and vocal cords start to form the beginning sounds of the next word before the last sound has been...
, only for -val/-vel and -vá/-vé - Initial vowel and no change depending on the stem ending, e.g. -ul/-ül, -ás/-és
- Link vowel o/e/ö on stems ending with a consonant, with link vowel a for certain back-vowel noun stems, e.g. -om/(-am)/-em/-öm/-m
- Link vowel a/e on stems ending with a consonant, e.g. -ak/-ek/-k
- Link vowel u/ü on stems ending with a consonant, e.g. -unk/-ünk/-nk
- Link consonant -j on stems ending with a vowel, and on certain stems ending with a consonant, only for -a/-e/-ja/-je and -uk/-ük/-juk/-jük
- Invariant, e.g. -kor, -ig
Minor variations:
- -on/-en/-ön/-n does not use the a link vowel for any nouns
- The accusative suffix, -ot/(-at)/-et/-öt/-t, does not use a link vowel for stems ending with certain consonants
Note: The long vowels á/é, ú/ű and ó/ő are not used as link vowels.
Citation form of suffixes
- Where the list of suffixes has only one, it is invariant and is used on all stems, e.g. -ig.
- Where the list of suffixes has 2, the first is the form for back vowel stems and the second is the form for front vowel stems, e.g. -ban/-ben: -ban is used for lakás and -ben is used for szem and fürdő.
- Where the list of suffixes has 3 forms with the vowels o/e/ö, the o form is used for back vowel stems, the e form is used for front unrounded stems and the ö form is used for front rounded stems. For example, -hoz/-hez/-höz: -hoz is used for lakás, -hez is used for szem and -höz is used for fürdő.
- Where the list of suffixes has ones which start with a vowel followed by one or more which start with a consonant, the forms which start with a vowel are used on consonant-final stems and the forms which start with a consonant are used on vowel-final stems. (The initial vowel of the suffix is called a link vowel and the rules for selection within the vowel or consonant group apply as above.) For example, -unk/-ünk/-nk: -unk is used on lakás, -ünk on szem and kör and -nk is used on fürdő.
- Where the list of suffixes has 4 forms for consonant-final stems, with the link vowels o/(a)/e/ö, the a form is used with certain back noun stems. For example, -om/(-am)/-em/-öm/-m: -om is used for lakás, -am is used for ház, -em is used for szem, -öm is used for kör and -m is used for fürdő.
Ending | Sample word | Suffix variation | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Constant | Difference by vowel quality | Difference by vowel quality and ending | ||||
-ig | ||||||
Consonant | lakás | lakásig házig szemig körig fürdőig |
lakásban házban |
lakáshoz házhoz |
lakásunk házunk |
lakásom |
ház | házam | |||||
szem | szemben körben fürdőben* |
szemhez | szemünk körünk |
szemem | ||
kör | körhöz fürdőhöz* |
köröm | ||||
Vowel | fürdő | fürdőnk | fürdőm |
* : Its suffix may agree with any of the preceding variants, e.g. fürdőben but autóban, fürdőhöz but autóhoz and tévéhez.
Personal suffixes and link vowels
Personal suffixes can have various uses in Hungarian grammar. There are two sets of them:- Type I uses the a/e set of vowels as link vowels
- whereas Type II uses the o/e/ö set.
Therefore, their differences are:
- Type I has -a- as link vowel where Type II only uses -o in back-vowel words
- Type I doesn't use -ö- as link vowel with front-vowel words while Type II does.
Type I (a/e) | Type II (o/e/ö) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Singular | Plural | Singular | Plural | |
1st person | -am/-em/ -m |
-nk |
-om/-em/-öm/ -m |
-nk |
2nd person (informal) | -ad/-ed/ -d |
-atok/-etek/ -tok/-tek |
-od/-ed/-öd/ -d |
-otok/-etek/-ötök/ -tok/-tek/-tök |
2nd person (formal or official) and 3rd person |
-ja/-je |
-juk/-jük |
-ja/-je |
-juk/-jük |
|
|
- In the example rows below the chart proper, the forms for the 1st person singular are given for the three basic types (back vowel, unrounded front vowel, rounded front vowel).
- Within cells, the first row is for stems ending in a consonant and the second for stems ending in a vowel.
- There is some variance with verbs (mostly in the 3rd person) but their forms still resemble this pattern.
- The házam, mézem, földem group has another special feature as well: they always use a link vowel in the accusative, independently of their endings (e.g. házat but gázt, mézet but gézt).
This difference often disambiguates meanings, e.g. jöttek means "they came" (past) and jöttök means "you [pl.] come" (present).
An extreme example is the longest Hungarian word 'megszentségteleníthetetlenségeskedéseitekért' (means 'due to your continuous pretending to be indesecratable'. This word contains mass of inflexions, prefix, suffix, etc. The core of the word is 'szent', meaning "saint.")
Note: the accusative suffix following the stem or following other suffixes shows the same difference, except for the six different forms for the six persons:
Type I (a/e) | Type II (o/e/ö) | |
---|---|---|
|
(accusative suffixes attached to the stem) |
Postpositions
As well as the noun suffixes, which are often equivalent to English prepositions, Hungarian also has postpositions.Amalgamation with personal pronouns
If postpositions are used with personal pronouns (cf. "to me"), most of them amalgamate with the suffixes expressing the person. Compare:Postposition | "Regular" postpositional use |
"Amalgamated" use with personal suffixes |
---|---|---|
alatt under |
az asztal alatt under the table |
alattam under me |
For the full list of such postpositions, see postpositions with personal suffixes.
Stand-alone postpositions
The following postpositions differ from the above in that they are not amalgamate with personal suffixes:Spatial postpositions | Time postpositions | Other postpositions |
---|---|---|
|
|
|
Derived postpositions
Certain standard postpositions are derived from a noun + 3rd person singular possessive suffix + case ending, e.g. apám révén "by the help of my father". See their list here.This internal structure affects how they are used with pronominal forms (see above).
Case requirements
Most postpositions govern the nominative case; the exceptions are listed below. (The genitive case below means that morphologically speaking, they can either take the nominative or the dative suffix, see Other noun endings.)genitive | valami / valaminek |
ellenére (despite), folyamán (during), jóvoltából (thanks to), kedvéért (for the sake of), következtében (due to), mentén (along), részére (for), révén (by/through/via), számára (for/to), útján (via) |
superessive | valamin | alul (under/below), át (through/over), belül (inside), felül/fölül (over/above), innen (this way from X), keresztül (across), kezdve (from X on), kívül (outside/except), túl (beyond) |
sublative | valamire | nézve (with respect to) |
allative | valamihez | hasonlóan (similarly to), képest (as compared to) |
adessive | valaminél | fogva1 (owing to) |
ablative | valamitől | fogva2 (from X on), kezdve (from X on) |
instrumental-comitative | valamivel | együtt (along with), szemben (opposite) |
Postpositions functioning as prepositions
Some postpositions may also precede the noun, thus functioning as prepositions: át (over/across), keresztül (through), együtt (together with), szemben (opposite), túl (beyond), e.g. át a folyón or a folyón át ("across the river").Adjective marking
Adjectives are unmarked for case. Attributive adjectives are not marked for number but predicative ones are. For example: piros almák ("red apples") but: Az almák pirosak. ("The apples [are] red.").Adverb derivation
The suffix -an/-en/-n is used to form adverbs of manner from adjectives. -l, -lag/-leg and -ul/-ül are also used to derive adverbs from some adjectives.There is also a suffix, -va/-ve, which is used to derive adverbs from verbs. Its nearest English equivalent is the -ing form functioning as a participle
Participle
In linguistics, a participle is a word that shares some characteristics of both verbs and adjectives. It can be used in compound verb tenses or voices , or as a modifier...
(rather than a noun). Example:
- Úszva jött ide. ("He came here swimming.")
Such participles (note the adverbial
Adverbial
In grammar an adverbial is a word or a group of words that modifies or tells us something about the sentence or the verb. The word adverbial is also used as an adjective, meaning 'having the same function as an adverb'...
usage) are referred to by term “adverbial participle
Adverbial participle
Adverbial participles are built out of a verb , and in most cases they play the role of the sentence element called adverbial in the grammar of some languages...
” (distinguished from adjectival participle
Adjectival participle
Adjectival participles are participles which are derived from verbs and which are used like adjectives. They contrast with verbal participles, which are considered to be forms of verbs rather than adjectives. In English for instance, adjectival participles may appear with modifiers typical of...
).
Use of adverbs
In Hungarian adverbs can be used predicatively with van. Examples: Korán van. ("It's early.") Nyitva van. ("It's open.")Degree adverbs
Some degree adverbs are formed from adjectives. The suffixes which are used are ones which are usually used on nouns:- -on/-en/-ön/-n, e.g. nagyon ("very")
- -vá/-vé, e.g. kissé ("somewhat, to some extent"), eléggé ("quite, fairly")
Comparative and superlative
ComparativeComparative
In grammar, the comparative is the form of an adjective or adverb which denotes the degree or grade by which a person, thing, or other entity has a property or quality greater or less in extent than that of another, and is used in this context with a subordinating conjunction, such as than,...
adjectives and adverbs are formed by adding -abb/-ebb/-bb to the adjective stem, e.g. gyors ("quick"), gyorsabb ("quicker"), gyorsan ("quickly"), gyorsabban ("more quickly").
To state the thing which is being compared with (like English "than"), Hungarian uses the noun suffix -nál/-nél or the preposition mint. (Note, mint is the only preposition in Hungarian.) For example gyorsabb a szélnél or gyorsabb, mint a szél ("faster than the wind").
Superlative
Superlative
In grammar, the superlative is the form of an adjective that indicates that the person or thing modified has the quality of the adjective to a degree greater than that of anything it is being compared to in a given context. English superlatives are typically formed with the suffix -est In...
adjectives and adverbs are formed by adding the prefix leg- to the comparative, e.g. a leggyorsabb ("the quickest"), a leggyorsabban ("the most quickly").
Example: magas ("tall/high") | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Degree | Word elements | Complete form | Meaning | ||
Prefix | Adjective stem |
Suffix | |||
Base | – | magas | – | magas | tall/high |
Comparative | – | -abb | magasabb | taller/higher | |
Superlative | leg- | -abb | legmagasabb | tallest/highest | |
Exaggerated | legesleg- | -abb | legeslegmagasabb | the very tallest/highest |
Notes:
- Back-vowel adjectives use a as link vowel (as in magasabb), while front-vowel ones use e (e.g. hidegebb "colder"). The only exception is nagy ("big"), which uses o as link vowel instead of a: nagyobb, legnagyobb, legeslegnagyobb.
- The exaggerated measure is used for stressing the superlative adjective.
Expressing time
Many expressions of time use the case endings and postpositions which are also used for position, e.g.:- -tól/-től - when from
- -ig - until when
- -ra/-re - by (before) a certain time
- között (postposition) - between
- előtt (postposition) - before
- után (postposition) - after
- -n belül (postposition with suffix) - within
There are also some which are used only for time, e.g.:
- -kor - at what time, e.g. kilenckor ("at nine"), karácsonykor ("at Christmas")
- -onta/-ente/-önte - every ..., e.g. naponta ("daily")
- múlva (postposition) - in ... time, e.g. 2 hét múlva ("in 2 weeks' time")
There are 2 ways of expressing how long ago something happened:
- 3rd singular possessive suffix with past tense, e.g. 10 éve költözött el. ("He moved away 10 years ago.")
- -val/-vel + ezelőtt with past tense, e.g. 10 évvel ezelőtt költözött el. ("He moved away 10 years ago.")
Telling the time
"Hány óra (van)? Mennyi (most) az idő?" ( " What time is it? What is the time? ")- 8.20 - Nyolc óra múlt húsz perccel. " It is twenty (minutes) past eight."
Times can be given by just the numbers, but this is not usual in speech, e.g.:
nyolc óra húsz ( literally "eight hour twenty") or nyolc húsz ( literally "eight twenty").
In speech the half and quarter hours are expressed by what fraction of the time to the next hour has elapsed.
These can be written using fractions, e.g.:
- 8.00 or 8 - nyolc ( literally "eight") or nyolc óra ( literally "eight hours")
- 8.15 or ¼ 9 - negyed kilenc ( literally "quarter nine")
- 8.30 or ½ 9 - fél kilenc ( literally "half nine")
- 8.45 or ¾ 9 - háromnegyed kilenc ( literally "three-quarters nine")
These are abbreviated in movie programmes as n9, f9 and h9 (with the initial letters of the fraction names).
The times in between these are expressed in relation to the next or previous quarter hour, e.g.:
- 8.20 - negyed kilenc múlt öt perccel ( literally "past 8.15 by 5 minutes")...
...or fél kilenc lesz tíz perc múlva ( literally "it will be 8.30 in 10 minutes' time")
- 8.25 - fél kilenc lesz öt perc múlva ( literally "it will be 8.30 in 5 minutes' time")
These are different when they refer to a time in the past or future:
- 8.20-kor - negyed kilenc után öt perccel ( literally "after 8.15 by 5 minutes")
- 8.25-kor - fél kilenc előtt öt perccel ( literally "before 8.30 by 5 minutes")
Duration structures
For a period of time extending up to the present:- 3rd singular possessive ending with present tense, e.g. 3 éve lakom itt. ("I've lived here for 3 years.")
- 3rd singular possessive ending with negative past tense, e.g. 10 éve nem láttam. ("I haven't seen him for 10 years.")
For a period of time in the past, present or future:
- accusative with dynamic verbs, e.g. 2 órát segítünk. ("We're helping for 2 hours."), 2 órát fogunk segíteni ("We're going to help for 2 hours."), 2 órát segítettünk. ("We helped for 2 hours.")
- -ig with stative verbs, e.g. 5 évig laktam Londonban. ("I lived in London for 5 years."), Egy percig sem maradok itt! ("I won't stay here even for a minute!")
These two structures are often interchangeable.
- The -ra/-re structure also exists, but it's rarely used in this sense since it may be ambiguous with the "by (before)" meaning. For example Három napra ment el. ("He left for three days.") Then again: Három napot/napig volt távol. ("He was away for three days.") – the above suffixes appear.
Negation
Verbs are negated with nem, except in the subjunctive when ne is used.Double negative is common with negative pronouns (like nobody, nothing, never, nowhere), see the article "Double negative" about Hungarian.
Question words
ki? is the basic question word for a person (cf. "who?") and mi? is the basic question word for a thing (cf. "what?"). Where meaningful, these can take the full range of case and noun suffixes, e.g. kit?, miben?, miképp? mi + ért ("for the purpose of") gives the question word miért? ("why?").milyen? is used to ask for a description. It can be used to ask about a whole noun phrase, e.g. Milyen a tanárod? ("What's your teacher like?") or as a determiner, e.g. Milyen lakást akarsz? ("What kind of flat do you want?"). Although there is no case suffix -lyan/-lyen, this ending also occurs in ilyen ("this kind of"), olyan ("that kind of"), valamilyen ("some kind of") and semmilyen ("no kind of").
The strict three-way distinction in direction which occurs in the positional suffixes also occurs in the question words: hol? ("where?"), hova? /hová? ("where to?") and honnan? ("where from?").
hány? is used to ask questions about numbers (cf. "how many?") and mennyi? about quantities (cf. "how much?"). Where meaningful, these can take the full range of case and noun suffixes, e.g. hánnyal?, hánykor?, mennyibe?, mennyiért? hány? can also take the full range of suffixes used for numbers and quantity expressions, e.g. hányadik?, hányas?
Yes/no questions
Yes/no questionYes-no question
In linguistics, a yes–no question, formally known as a polar question, is a question whose expected answer is either "yes" or "no". Formally, they present an exclusive disjunction, a pair of alternatives of which only one is acceptable. In English, such questions can be formed in both positive...
s are expressed by intonation not by any modification to syntax or morphology.
A short positive answer to a yes/no question is often given by repeating the verb particle (or the full verb, if it has no particle) rather than by using the words Igen ("Yes"). Examples:
- Elment? – El. ("Has he left? – He has.", literally "[He] away-went? – Away.")
- Látta a filmet? – Látta. ("Did he see the film? – He did.", literally "[He] saw the film? – [He] saw.").
The negative answer to a yes/no question may include the word Nem ("No") or the negation of the requested part of the sentence or both.
- Elment?
- Nem. (this option may sound rude) / Nem ment el. / Nem, nem ment el. ("No, he hasn't left.")
Tag questions
Tag questionTag question
A question tag or tag question is a grammatical structure in which a declarative statement or an imperative is turned into a question by adding an interrogative fragment . For example, in the sentence "You're John, aren't you?", the statement "You're John" is turned into a question by the tag...
s are made by adding ugye to the beginning or end of a statement. E.g. Elment, ugye? or Ugye elment? ("He has left, hasn't he?"). The latter form more strongly suggests the positive answer.
Subordinate and relative clauses
Subordinate clauses are often used with an antecedent in the main clause, e.g. Kabátot hozott, mert fázott. /Azért hozott kabátot, mert fázott. ("She fetched a coat because she was cold.")Relative clauses usually have an explicit antecedent
Antecedent (grammar)
In grammar, an antecedent is a noun, noun phrase, or clause to which an anaphor refers in a coreference. For example, in the passage "I did not see John because he wasn't there", "John" is the antecedent of the anaphor "he"; together "John" and "he" are called a coreference because they both refer...
in the main clause, e.g. Attól félek, nem mehetek el. ("I'm afraid [of the fact that] I can't go.") However, Félek, (hogy) nem mehetek el. is also correct.
External links
- Hungarian phrasebook at Wikitravel
- http://www.magyarora.com
- Magyar Nyelvtan