HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Hungarian grammar is the grammar of Hungarian, a Finno-Ugric language that is spoken mainly in
Hungary Hungary ( hu, Magyarország ) is a landlocked country in Central Europe. Spanning of the Carpathian Basin, it is bordered by Slovakia to the north, Ukraine to the northeast, Romania to the east and southeast, Serbia to the south, Croa ...
and in parts of its seven neighboring countries. Hungarian, a highly agglutinative language, uses various affixes, mainly
suffix In linguistics, a suffix is an affix which is placed after the stem of a word. Common examples are case endings, which indicate the grammatical case of nouns, adjectives, and verb endings, which form the conjugation of verbs. Suffixes can carry ...
es, to change the meaning of words and their grammatical function. These affixes are mostly attached according to
vowel harmony In phonology, vowel harmony is an assimilatory process in which the vowels of a given domain – typically a phonological word – have to be members of the same natural class (thus "in harmony"). Vowel harmony is typically long distance, me ...
.
Verb A verb () is a word (part of speech) that in syntax generally conveys an action (''bring'', ''read'', ''walk'', ''run'', ''learn''), an occurrence (''happen'', ''become''), or a state of being (''be'', ''exist'', ''stand''). In the usual descrip ...
s are conjugated according to
definiteness In linguistics, definiteness is a semantic feature of noun phrases, distinguishing between referents or senses that are identifiable in a given context (definite noun phrases) and those which are not (indefinite noun phrases). The prototypical ...
, tense, mood,
person A person ( : people) is a being that has certain capacities or attributes such as reason, morality, consciousness or self-consciousness, and being a part of a culturally established form of social relations such as kinship, ownership of pro ...
and
number A number is a mathematical object used to count, measure, and label. The original examples are the natural numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, and so forth. Numbers can be represented in language with number words. More universally, individual numbers c ...
.
Noun A noun () is a word that generally functions as the name of a specific object or set of objects, such as living creatures, places, actions, qualities, states of existence, or ideas.Example nouns for: * Living creatures (including people, alive, ...
s can be declined with 18 case suffixes, most of which correspond to English prepositions. Hungarian is a topic-prominent language and so its word order depends on the
topic-comment In linguistics, the topic, or theme, of a sentence is what is being talked about, and the comment (rheme or focus) is what is being said about the topic. This division into old vs. new content is called information structure. It is generally ...
structure of the sentence (that is, what aspect is assumed to be known and what is emphasized).


Word order

Neutral Hungarian sentences have a subject–verb–object word order, like English. Hungarian is a
null-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. In the principles and parameters framework, the null sub ...
and so the subject does not have to be explicitly stated.
Word order In linguistics, word order (also known as linear order) is the order of the syntactic constituents of a language. Word order typology studies it from a cross-linguistic perspective, and examines how different languages employ different orders. C ...
is determined not by
syntactic In linguistics, syntax () is the study of how words and morphemes combine to form larger units such as phrases and sentences. Central concerns of syntax include word order, grammatical relations, hierarchical sentence structure (constituency ...
roles but rather by pragmatic factors. Emphasis is placed on the word or phrase immediately before the
finite verb Traditionally, a finite verb (from la, fīnītus, past participle of to put an end to, bound, limit) is the form "to which number and person appertain", in other words, those inflected for number and person. Verbs were originally said to be ''f ...
. The four parts that a sentence usually contains are topic, focus, verb and the rest; however, any of the four parts may be empty. The topic and the rest may contain any number of phrases, but the focus may contain only one phrase.


Emphasis

The tables below contain some Hungarian variations of the sentence ''János tegnap elvitt két könyvet Péternek.'' ("John took two books to Peter yesterday.") Besides the verb, the sentence contains four other elements: ''János'' ("John"), ''Péternek'' ("to Peter"), ''két könyvet'' ("two books") and ''tegnap'' ("yesterday"). The topic contains a phrase or phrases that the speaker considers to be known and are used to introduce the ''topic'' of the statement, equivalent to "as far as X is concerned,...". The focus attracts the attention to an element of the event that is considered to be 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 and is equivalent to "it was X and nothing else that...". If a focus is present, the verbal prefix will be put after the verb (''vitt el'' is used instead of ''elvitt''). If there is no verbal prefix, there may be ambiguity in writing since the phrase before the verb may be either a topic or a focus. For example, in the sentence ''Éva szereti a virágokat'' ("Eve likes heflowers"), ''Éva'' may be a topic and the sentence may be neutral, or ''Éva'' may be a focus and the sentence may emphasize that it is Eve who likes flowers:


Morphology

Hungarian is an agglutinative language. Most grammatical information is given through
suffixes In linguistics, a suffix is an affix which is placed after the stem of a word. Common examples are case endings, which indicate the grammatical case of nouns, adjectives, and verb endings, which form the conjugation of verbs. Suffixes can car ...
: "at the table" = ''asztalon'' (space relation), "at 5 o'clock" = ''öt órakor'' (time relation). There is also one grammatical
prefix A prefix is an affix which is placed before the stem of a word. Adding it to the beginning of one word changes it into another word. For example, when the prefix ''un-'' is added to the word ''happy'', it creates the word ''unhappy''. Particula ...
(''leg-'' for superlatives).


Overview of personal endings: typical sound elements

In Hungarian, the endings are common mostly for endings of pronouns with suffixes and postpositions, possessive endings of nouns and endings of verbs. (The accusative of pronouns is also given for comparison, but it is less regular.)


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 In phonology, vowel harmony is an assimilatory process in which the vowels of a given domain – typically a phonological word – have to be members of the same natural class (thus "in harmony"). Vowel harmony is typically long distance, me ...
'' for a more detailed explanation. Most (if not all) of morphological word endings in Hungarian for verb conjugations (definite and indefinite), possessive suffixes and 'case-related' postpositions can be thought of as 'templates' that are, in turn, 'filled in' with vowels. While the template itself consists mainly of consonants (and sometimes vowels), the vowels that 'fill in' the template depend on the class of vowels (front, back, long, short, rounded, unrounded) in the word to which the template is attached. For example, 'bVn' would be the template for the postposition meaning 'in' (with 'V' being the 'fill-in' vowel position) and it can be 'filled in' with either 'a' (for back vowels), thus forming 'ban,' or with 'e' (for front vowels), thus forming 'ben.' On the other hand, 'hVz' would be the template for the postposition meaning 'to' and this can be 'filled in' with 'o' (back), 'e' (front unrounded), or 'ö' (front rounded). The particular vowel or vowels taken by a template must mostly be memorized by a learner of Hungarian, but certain patterns can be noted by observing the particular phonological makeup of the consonants in the template. For example, 'vVl' is the template meaning 'with,' but the first consonant ('v') changes to match the final consonant of the word to which it is attached (provided the word ends in a consonant). Note that the stem-final ''a'' and ''e'', as well as ''o'' and ''ö'' in foreign words, are lengthened before suffixes: ''alma → almát, mese → mesét, pianó → pianót, Malmö → Malmőt.'' (Short ''o'' and ''ö'' cannot occur at the end of Hungarian words.) Short ''i'', ''u'' and ''ü'' retain their length: ''ami → amit, kapu → kaput, menü → menüt.'' Here are the vowels that form parallel pairs or triads in harmonic suffixes: It can be seen the members of these pairs/triads agree mostly in
height Height is measure of vertical distance, either vertical extent (how "tall" something or someone is) or vertical position (how "high" a point is). For example, "The height of that building is 50 m" or "The height of an airplane in-flight is abo ...
and
length Length is a measure of distance. In the International System of Quantities, length is a quantity with dimension distance. In most systems of measurement a base unit for length is chosen, from which all other units are derived. In the In ...
but differ in backness. (An exception is the pair ''á/é'' for which ''á'' ( open ''front'' unrounded vowel) is considered to be ''back''.) In the cases of ''o'' vs. '' e'' and '' ö'' and of '' a'' and '' e'' there appears a difference in
roundedness In phonetics, vowel roundedness is the amount of rounding in the lips during the articulation of a vowel. It is labialization of a vowel. When a ''rounded'' vowel is pronounced, the lips form a circular opening, and ''unrounded'' vowels are pro ...
, too. Notes: *''e'' is used in two of the groups. There are no suffixes that have ''a/e/ö'', and ''o/e'' (without ''ö'') is very rare and is used only for certain second-person plural suffixes. *Whenever ''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 classified into the following phonological types: #Initial consonant and no change depending on the stem ending: ''-ban/-ben'', ''-hoz/-hez/-höz'' #Initial ''v'' with complete preservative consonant assimilation, only for ''-val/-vel'' and ''-vá/-vé'' #Initial vowel and no change depending on the stem ending: ''-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: ''-ak/-ek/-k'' #Link vowel ''u/ü'' on stems ending with a consonant: ''-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: ''-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 that the long vowels ''á/é'', ''ú/ű'' and ''ó/ő'' are not used as link vowels.


Citation form of suffixes

*If the list of suffixes has only one invariant form, it is used on all stems: ''-ig''. *If the list of suffixes has two forms, the former is the form for back vowel stems and the latter is the form for front vowel stems: ''-ban/-ben'': ''-ban'' is used for ''lakás'' and ''-ben'' is used for ''szem'' and ''fürdő''. *If the list of suffixes has three 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: ''-hoz/-hez/-höz'': ''-hoz'' is used for ''lakás'', ''-hez'' is used for ''szem'' and ''-höz'' is used for ''fürdő''. *If the list of suffixes has forms that start with a vowel that are followed by one or more forms that start with a consonant, the forms that 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 to select the form in the vowel or consonant group apply as above: ''-unk/-ünk/-nk'': ''-unk'' is used on ''lakás'', ''-ünk'' on ''szem'' and ''kör'' and ''-nk'' is used on ''fürdő''. *If the list of suffixes has four forms for consonant-final stems, with the link vowels ''o/(a)/e/ö'', the ''a'' form is used with certain back noun stems: ''-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''. :*: 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. *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 The accusative case ( abbreviated ) of a noun is the grammatical case used to mark the direct object of a transitive verb. In the English language, the only words that occur in the accusative case are pronouns: 'me,' 'him,' 'her,' 'us,' and ‘ ...
, 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 l.come" (present). An extreme example is the longest Hungarian word 'megszentségteleníthetetlenségeskedéseitekért' (means 'due to your repeatedly not being possible to be desecrated'). This word contains mass of inflexions, prefix, suffix, etc. The core of the word is 'szent', meaning "sacred." 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:


Noun phrase

:''See Hungarian noun phrase.''


Postpositions

As well as the noun suffixes, which are often equivalent to English prepositions, Hungarian also has
postposition Prepositions and postpositions, together called adpositions (or broadly, in traditional grammar, simply prepositions), are a class of words used to express spatial or temporal relations (''in'', ''under'', ''towards'', ''before'') or mark various ...
s.


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: 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 never suffixed with personal endings:


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 take either the nominative or the dative suffix, see Other noun endings.)


Postpositions functioning as prepositions

Some postpositions may also precede the noun, thus functioning as ''pre''positions: ''át'' (over/across), ''keresztül'' (through), ''együtt'' (together with), ''szemben'' (opposite), ''túl'' (beyond), e.g. ''át a folyón'' or ''a folyón át'' ("across the river").


Adjectives and adverbs


Adjective marking

Adjectives are unmarked for case.
Attributive adjective In linguistics, an adjective (abbreviated ) is a word that generally modifies a noun or noun phrase or describes its referent. Its semantic role is to change information given by the noun. Traditionally, adjectives were considered one of the m ...
s are unmarked for number but predicative adjectives are marked: ''piros'' ''almák'' ("red apples") but ''Az almák pirosak.'' ("The apples rered.").


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 in a present participle (rather than a noun): *''Úszva jött ide.'' ("He came here swimming.") When combined with a form of the existential verb ''(van),'' it expresses the result of an action: *''A vacsora el van készítve'' ("The dinner is prepared."), from the verb ''elkészít'' ("prepare"). Such participles (note the
adverbial In English grammar, an adverbial ( abbreviated ) is a word (an adverb) or a group of words (an adverbial clause or adverbial phrase) that modifies or more closely defines the sentence or the verb. (The word ''adverbial'' itself is also used as a ...
usage) are referred to by term " adverbial participle" (distinguished from adjectival participle).


Use of adverbs

In Hungarian adverbs can be used predicatively with ''van'' ("is"): ''Korán van.'' ("It's early.") ''Nyitva van.'' ("It's open.")


Degree adverbs

Some degree adverbs are formed from adjectives. The suffixes are the same ones that 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

Comparative general linguistics, the comparative is a syntactic construction that serves to express a comparison between two (or more) entities or groups of entities in quality or degree - see also comparison (grammar) for an overview of comparison, as well ...
adjectives and adverbs are formed by adding ''-abb/-ebb/-bb'' to the ''adjective'' stem: ''gyors'' ("quick"), ''gyorsabb'' ("quicker"), ''gyorsan'' ("quickly"), ''gyorsabban'' ("more quickly"). To state the thing that is being compared with (like English "than"), Hungarian uses the noun suffix ''-nál/-nél'' or the preposition ''mint'' (''mint'' is the only ''pre''position in Hungarian): ''gyorsabb a szélnél'' or ''gyorsabb, mint a szél'' ("faster than the wind").
Superlative Comparison is a feature in the morphology or syntax of some languages whereby adjectives and adverbs are inflected to indicate the relative degree of the property they define exhibited by the word or phrase they modify or describe. In languages ...
adjectives and adverbs are formed by adding the prefix ''leg-'' to the comparative: ''a leggyorsabb'' ("the quickest"), ''a leggyorsabban'' ("the most quickly"). 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 to stress the superlative adjective.


Verbs

:''See
Hungarian verbs This page is about verbs in Hungarian grammar. Lemma or citation form There is basically only one pattern for verb endings, with predictable variations dependent on the phonological context. The lemma or citation form is always the third per ...
''


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; among *''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." *8.50 – ''Tíz perc múlva kilenc óra.'' "It is ten to nine." 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 9 – ''negyed kilenc'' (literally "quarter nine") *8.30 or 9 – ''fél kilenc'' (literally "half nine") *8.45 or 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 quarter 9 by 5 minutes")... ...or ''fél kilenc lesz tíz perc múlva'' (literally "it will be half 9 in 10 minutes' time") *8.25 – '' fél kilenc lesz öt perc múlva'' (literally "it will be half 9 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 quarter 9 by 5 minutes") *8.25-kor – ''fél kilenc előtt öt perccel'' (literally "before half 9 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 been living 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 or multiple negative is mandatory with negative pronouns (like ''nobody, nothing, never, nowhere'').


Questions


Question words

''Ki?'' is the basic question word for a person ("who?"), and ''mi?'' is the basic question word for a thing ("what?"). If it is meaningful, they can take the full range of case and noun suffixes: ''kit?'', ''miben?'', ''miképp?'' ''mi'' + ''ért'' ("for the purpose of") gives the question word ''miért?'' ("why?"). ''Milyen?'' is used to ask for a description and can be used either to ask about a whole noun phrase (''Milyen a tanárod?'' "What is your teacher like?") or as a determiner (''Milyen lakást akarsz?'' "What kind of flat do you want?"). There is no case suffix ''-lyan/-lyen'', but that ending still 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 that 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 ("how many?"), and ''mennyi?'' is used to ask about quantities ("how much?"). If it is meaningful, they can take the full range of case and noun suffixes, and ''hánnyal?'', ''hánykor?'', ''mennyibe?'', ''mennyiért?'' ''hány?'' can also take the full range of suffixes used for numbers and to express quantity: ''hányadik?'', ''hányas?''


Yes/no question

Yes-no questions are expressed by intonation and 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 " eaway-went? – Away.") * ''Látta a filmet? – Látta.'' ("Did he see the film? – He did." Literally " esaw the film? – esaw."). A negative answer to a yes-no question may include the word ''Nem'' ("No"), 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." Literally "No, not ewent away.")


Tag questions

Tag questions are made by adding ''ugye'' to the beginning or end of a statement: ''Elment, ugye?'' or ''Ugye elment?'' ("He has left, hasn't he?"). The latter form more strongly suggests a 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 ot for some other reason) Relative clauses usually have an explicit antecedent in the main clause, e.g. ''Attól félek/tartok, (hogy) nem mehetek el.'' ("I'm afraid f the fact thatI can't go.")


References


"The Hungarian Language: A Short Descriptive Grammar"
by Beáta Megyesi (PDF document) * Keresztes, László (1999). ''A practical Hungarian grammar'' (3rd, rev. ed.). Debrecen: Debreceni Nyári Egyetem. . * Törkenczy, Miklós (2002). ''Practical Hungarian grammar: compact guide to the basics of Hungarian grammar'. Budapest: Corvina. . * Törkenczy, Miklós (1999). ''Hungarian verbs and essentials of grammar: a practical guide to the mastery of Hungarian'' (2nd ed.). Budapest: Corvina; Lincolnwood,
ll. Ll/ll is a digraph that occurs in several languages English In English, often represents the same sound as single : . The doubling is used to indicate that the preceding vowel is (historically) short, or that the "l" sound is to be extended l ...
Passport Books. . * Rounds, Carol (2001). ''Hungarian: an essential grammar''. London; New York: Routledge. .
Hungarian Language Learning References
(including the short reviews of three of the above books) *''Noun Declension Tables – HUNGARIAN''. Budapest
PonsKlett
*''Verb Conjugation Tables – HUNGARIAN''. Budapest
PonsKlett


Akadémiai Kiadó Budapest 2009


External links

* http://www.magyarora.com
HungarianReference.com
{{Authority control