Hungarian languageThe Hungarian language is usually classified as Finno-Ugric. It is spoken in Hungary and in certain areas of Romania, Slovakia, Ukraine, Serbia, Croatia, Austria, Slovenia, all territories acquired after World War I. The Hungarian name for the language is Magyar. There are about 14.5 million speakers, of whom 10 million live in Hungary. {| border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" align="right" width="300"\n! colspan="2" bgcolor=limegreen style="font-size:120%"|Hungarian (Magyar)\n|-\n| valign="top"|Spoken in:\n|Hungary and 10 other countries\n|-\n| valign="top"|Region:\n| --\n|-\n| valign="top"|Total speakers:\n|14.5 Million\n|-\n| valign="top"|Ranking:\n|66\n|-\n| valign="top"|Geneticclassification:\n|Uralic \n Finno-Ugric \n Ugric \n Hungarian\n|-\n! colspan="2" bgcolor=limegreen|Official status\n|-\n| valign="top"|Official language of:\n| valign="top"|Hungary\n|-\n| valign="top"|Regulated by:\n| valign="top"| --\n|-\n! colspan="2" bgcolor=limegreen|Language codes\n|-\n|ISO 639-1||hu\n|-\n|ISO 639-2||hun\n|-\n|SIL||HNG\n|} Classification\nHungarian is generally believed to be a member of the Ugric languages, a sub-group of the Finno-Ugric languages, which in turn are a branch of the Uralic languages. There are various alternative theories about the origins of Hungarian, but these are dismissed by most linguists owing to a lack of evidence:
Geographic distribution\nHungarian is spoken in the following countries: {|\n!Country!!Speakers\n|-\n|Hungary||align="right"|10,298,820\n|-\n|Romania(mainly Transylvania)||align="right"| 1,700,000 - 3,000,000(X)\n|-\n|Slovakia||align="right"|597,400\n|-\n|Serbia and Montenegro||align="right"|293,000\n|-\n|Ukraine||align="right"|187,000\n|-\n|Israel||align="right"|70,000\n|-\n|Austria||align="right"|22,000\n|-\n|Croatia||align="right"|16,500\n|-\n|Slovenia||align="right"|9,240\n|} (X) of which, according to the 2002 census, 1,450,000 speak it as mother tongue. Hungarian is also spoken in Australia, Canada, and the USA. Source:Ethnologue Official status\nHungarian is the official language of Hungary, and thus an official language of the EU.Dialects\nThe dialects of Hungarian identified by Ethnologue are: Alfold, West Danube, Danube-Tisza, King's Pass Hungarian, Northeast Hungarian, Northwest Hungarian, Szekely and West Hungarian.Sounds\nHungarian pronunciation can mostly be predicted from the written language. There are some sounds which don't exist in English, such as '/ɟ/. For a complete table of the pronunciation of the Hungarian alphabet, see this article in the Hungarian Wikipedia (in Hungarian, but the table is obvious), which transliterates Hungarian letters into IPA and X-SAMPA characters. For example the pronunciation of "Magyarország" (Hungary) is /mɑɟɑrorsaːg/, stress on first syllable.Grammar\nThe order of words in a sentence is determined not by syntactic roles but rather by pragmatic, i.e. discourse-driven, factors. Words can be compound (as in German) and derived (with suffixes). The passive voice is almost extinct (it can be found in old literary texts). Many grammatical and syntactic functions, elements and constructions are based on suffixes. The mark for the plural of a noun is a suffixed -k, preceded by a vowel if the word ends in a consonant. Usually, vowels are inserted between the word and its suffix to prevent a buildup of consonants (and hence to prevent unpronouncable words). Hungarian has many different cases (esetek). Most common are the Nominative case, Accusative case and Dative case; some express location (inside: Inessive case, on the surface: Superessive case, nearby: Adessive case); some express placement (from inside: Elative case, from the surface: Delative case, from nearby: Ablative case, to inside: Illative case, to the surface: Sublative case, to nearby: Allative case); some express other relations (Terminative case, Essive-formal case, Instrumental-comitative case, Translative case, Causal-final case). There are further cases of restricted use (Locative case, Essive-modal case, Distributive case, Distributive-temporal case, Sociative case). For examples of some of these cases, refer to the article on the Finnish language. The infinitive of verbs is the radical suffixed by -ni.VerbsAs a beginning of a more complete vocabulary (szókincs), an extract for the verb "to be" in hungarian, lenni. Forms are presented in this order: I, You, He/She/It, We, You, They én, te, ő, mi, ti, ők The polite form of Thou is either ön or maga: ön is official and distancing, maga is personal and even intimate. (There are some older forms of you like "kend" which is still used in rural areas.)\n(As you probably noticed, Hungarian does not have gender-specific pronouns.)Indicative Mood\nPresentTense: vagyok, vagy, van, vagyunk, vagytok, vannak PastTense: voltam, voltál, volt, voltunk, voltatok, voltak FutureTense: leszek, leszel, lesz, leszünk, lesztek, lesznekConditional Mood\nPresentTense: lennék, lennél, lenne, lennénk, lennétek, lennének ImperativeTense: legyek, legyél (or légy), legyen, legyünk, legyetek, legyenekVocabularyHungarian vocabulary contains many words borrowed from various Turkic languages, as well as a few words borrowed from the Turkish language, and several hundred loans from German and Slavic languages but has retained its Ugric originality. The basic vocabulary shares many basic words with Finnish and Estonian (e.g. the numbers egy ~ yksi ~ üks, kettő ~ kaksi ~ kaks, három ~ kolme ~ kolm, négy ~ neljä ~ neli; víz ~ vesi "water"; kéz ~ käsi "hand"; vér ~ veri "blood"; fej ~ pää ~ pea "head" etc.), so linguists classify both as Finno-Ugric languages, a subgroup of the Uralic language family.Writing system\nHungarian is written using a variant of the Latin alphabet. Hungarian has a phonemic orthography. In addition to the standard letters of the Latin alphabet, Hungarian uses several additional letters. These include letters with acute accents (á,é,í,ó,ú) which represent long vowels, the diaereses ö and ü and their long counterparts ő (unicode Ő and ő) and ű (unicode Ű and ű). Sometimes ô or ő is used for ő and ű for ű due to the limitations of the Latin-1 / ISO-8859-1 codepage. Hungarian can be properly represented with the Latin-2 / ISO-8859-2 codepage, but this codepage is not always available. (Hungarian is the only language using the ő and ű codes.) Of course Unicode includes the glyphs, and they therefore can be used on the internet. Additionally, the letter pairs <ny>, <ty>, and <gy> represent the palatal consonants /ñ/, /tj/, and /gj/ (like the "dy" sound in British "duke" or American "would you").\nHungarian uses <s> for /S/ and <sz> for /s/, which is the reverse of Polish.Examples\nThere is a Hungarian Wikipedia at hu.wikipedia.org
External links\n* Hungarian - A Strange Cake on the Menu - article by Nádasdy Ádám\n* Ethnologue report for Hungarian\n* Numerals of some Uralic languages\n* Uralic pageDictionaries\n*Hungarian-English-Hungarian\n*Hungarian-English False cognates (False Cognates)\n*Hungarian slangOnline Language Courses\n* Online course harvard.edu/~arubin/\n* Online course hungarotips.com\n* Hungarian Profile\n* Study Hungarian! (AFS.com)\n* Hungarian Phrase Guides\n* Magyaróra: New paths to the Hungarian languageMore links for learners\n*Course, Vocabularies, Phrases, Literature... Category:Finno-Ugric languages \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n |
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