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Hungarian verbs

This page is about verbs in Hungarian grammar.

Lemma or citation form edit

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 person singular indefinite present. This usually has a ∅ suffix, e.g. kér ("ask", "have a request").

-ik verbs edit

A slight variation to the standard pattern is with certain verbs which have third person singular indefinite present ending with -ik, e.g. dolgozik ("s/he works"), and 1st singular indefinite present usually with -om/-em/-öm. The stem for this is reached by removing -ik. These verbs are one of the reasons why this form is the citation form.

The -ik verbs were originally middle voice, reflexive or passive in meaning, which can still be seen e.g. about the pair tör ("s/he breaks something") vs törik ("something breaks" / "something gets broken"). However, most of them have lost this connection (they can have active meanings) so historically speaking they are like deponent verbs. Some verb pairs only differ in the presence or absence of the -ik ending, while they are unrelated in meaning, such as ér ('be worth something' or 'arrive') and érik ('ripen').

With these verbs, the third person singular (present indefinite indicative) form (i.e., the lemma) consistently uses the -ik form. What is more, new -ik words continue to be created (e.g. netezik "use the Internet").

However, the first person singular (present indefinite indicative) suffix is often assimilated to the "normal" conjugation (as it has happened to the other -ik-specific forms), so most verbs usually take the regular form for this person (e.g. hazudok; *hazudom would be taken as hypercorrect or incorrect). Nevertheless, with some basic -ik verbs, the assimilated variant is stigmatized (e.g. eszem is expected in educated speech, rather than *eszek), so with these verbs, the traditional form is advised. At any rate, such non-traditional, assimilated variants are not rare in colloquial spoken language.

Since this (3rd person singular indefinite) -ik ending coincides with the -ik ending of the 3rd person plural definite form, only the type of the object makes it possible to identify the subject:

  • eszik egy almát: egy almát "an apple" is indefinite, so the verb must be a singular form, i.e. "s/he is eating an apple;"
  • eszik az almát: az almát "the apple" is definite, so the verb must be a plural form, i.e. "they are eating the apple."

In fact, most -ik verbs are intransitive, and the context may clarify the question even if the subject is not made explicit.

Regular (non -ik)
verbs
Non-traditional Traditional
-ik verbs
1st person singular
indefinite
kérek hazudok eszem
(*eszek)
3rd person singular
indefinite
(lemma)
kér hazudik eszik
Meaning "ask"
("request")
"tell a lie" "eat"

Some important "traditional" -ik verbs are the following. A person may appear uneducated if s/he uses the -k ending with them for the 1st person singular form:

aggódik "worry", álmodik "dream", alszik "sleep", bízik "trust", dicsekszik "brag", dohányzik "smoke", dolgozik "work", emlékszik "remember", érdeklődik "be interested or inquire", érkezik "arrive", esküszik "swear", eszik "eat", fázik "be cold", fekszik "lie" ("recline"), foglalkozik "deal with", gondolkodik or gondolkozik "be thinking", gondoskodik "look after", gyanakszik "suspect", gyönyörködik "delight in", hallatszik "be audible", haragszik "be angry", hiányzik "be missing", igyekszik "strive, hurry", iszik "drink", játszik "play", jelentkezik "apply", költözik "move (residence)", következik "follow", különbözik "differ", lakik "live" (inhabit), látszik "be visible", működik "function", növekszik "grow", nyugszik "rest", öregszik "grow old", panaszkodik "complain", származik "originate from", találkozik "meet", tartozik "owe" or "belong", tartózkodik "stay" ("reside"), törődik "care about", unatkozik "be bored", vágyik "desire", változik "change" (refl.), verekszik "fight" (e.g. at school), veszekszik "quarrel", vetkőzik "take off clothes", viselkedik "behave" and vitatkozik "argue".[1]

For most other verbs, the -k ending is common in the indefinite meaning, especially in casual speech. Verbs ending in -zik, which refer to using some tool, almost exclusively take the -k, such as biciklizik "ride the bicycle", gitározik "play the guitar" or mobilozik "use the mobile phone".

There are a few non-traditional -ik verbs where the -m ending is impossible and ungrammatical (except in the definite conjugation, if meaningful). These are called "pseudo ik verbs" (álikes igék) in Hungarian. Examples:

bomlik "dissolve", (el)bújik "hide", egerészik "catch mice", érik "ripen", folyik "flow", gyűlik "assemble" (refl.), hazudik "tell a lie", hullik "fall", illik "suit", kopik "wear off", megjelenik "appear", múlik "pass", nyílik "open" (refl.), ömlik "pour" (refl.), születik "be born", (meg)szűnik "discontinue", telik "fill up", tojik "lay (eggs)", törik "get broken", tűnik "seem", válik "become" or "divorce", züllik "become depraved".[2]

The regular non -ik verb könyörög "beg" has a hypercorrect first-person singular indefinite present form könyörgöm "I am begging" (used especially as an emphatic interjection to support an argument in spoken language), which conjugation mimics that of -ik verbs. The correct form would be könyörgök. However, it is argued by some[3][4] that the form könyörgöm is not unacceptable, either, and it reflects an idiomatic expression könyörgöm (magát/az Istent) "I am begging (you/God)", which has eventually lost its object and in which the form könyörgöm actually (correctly) follows definite conjugation.

Infinitive edit

The infinitive of a verb is the form suffixed by -ni, e.g. várni, kérni. There is a variant -ani/eni, which is used with the following groups:

  • verbs ending in two consonants (e.g. tszani, tartani, küldeni, választani, festeni, mondani, hallani, ajánlani),
  • verbs ending in a long vowel + t (e.g. fűteni, véteni, tanítani, bocsátani) and
  • the words véd and edz (védeni and edzeni respectively).

Exceptions are állni "to stand", szállni "to fly", varrni "to sew", forrni "to boil", which have -ni despite the two consonants. This is due to the fact that, in written language, the "long" 'l' or 'r' of the stem has to be kept even in the forms where it is pronounced short.


Infinitive with personal suffixes edit

When an infinitive is used with an impersonal verb, the personal suffixes may be added to the infinitive to indicate the person, as in Portuguese. Except in the 3rd person singular and plural, the -i of the infinitive is dropped, e.g. Mennem kell. ("I have to go."). The person can also be indicated using -nak/-nek, e.g. Nekem kell mennem. ("I have to go.), Jánosnak mennie kell ("János has to go.")

These forms use the o/e/ö set of suffixes (Type II, like possessive suffixes do), see Personal suffixes and link vowels.

Person menni (to go) látni (to see)
for me to go etc. for me to see etc.
1st Sg. mennem látnom
2nd Sg. menned látnod
3rd Sg. mennie látnia
1st Pl. mennünk látnunk
2nd Pl. mennetek látnotok
3rd Pl. menniük látniuk

Tenses edit

Most verbs have two inflected tenses, past and present, and a future form using an auxiliary verb. The verb lenni, to be, has three inflected tenses: past (volt = was), present (van = is) and future (lesz = will be).

Present edit

In the present tense, only sibilant-ending verbs differ from the rest, such as verbs ending in -s, -sz, -z and -dz. The chart below compares the conjugation of the regular kér 'ask' ("have a request") and vár 'wait' (as examples for front and back vowels) with the sibilant-ending keres 'look for' and mászik 'climb.' Example of verbs ending in the other two possible sonorants, -z and -dz, are húz 'pull' and edz 'train', which similarly double their stem consonants where -s and -sz are doubled (e.g. húzzuk, eddzük in the first person plural).

Person Indefinite conjugation Definite conjugation
Regular Sibilant-ending Regular Sibilant-ending
1st Sg kérek, várok keresek, mászok* kérem, várom keresem, mászom
2nd Sg kérsz, vársz keresel, mászol kéred, várod keresed, mászod
3rd Sg kér, vár keres, mászik* kéri, várja keresi, mássza
1st Pl kérünk, várunk keresünk, mászunk kérjük, várjuk keressük, másszuk
2nd Pl kértek, vártok kerestek, másztok kéritek, várjátok keresitek, másszátok
3rd Pl kérnek, várnak keresnek, másznak kérik, várják keresik, másszák
1st > 2nd (e.g. 'I ask you') kérlek, várlak kereslek, mászlak N/A N/A
*: mászik being an -ik verb, its indefinite 1st person singular form can be mászom instead of mászok in literary style. The ik ending in its indefinite 3rd person singular form naturally doesn't apply to verbs without this ending.

The forms marked in bold are those where the suffix of sibilant-ending verbs differ from the suffix of other verbs: either because of the alternative 2nd person ending l (to avoid two sibilants getting next to each other), or because of the assimilation of j. Incidentally, the latter forms (with doubled stem consonants) coincide with the subjunctive (or imperative) forms.

Futurity edit

Futurity can be expressed in a variety of ways:

  1. By the auxiliary verb fog for any verb, expressing a strong intention or a necessity of events brought about by circumstances (fog menni = "will go", fog beszélni = "will speak", fog lenni = "will be".)
  2. The verb van, uniquely, has an inflected future tense (leszek, leszel etc.). (See van (to be).)
  3. By the present tense, when this is clearly a reference to a future time (e.g. the presence of explicit temporal adverbs, e.g. majd = soon) or in the case of verbs with perfective aspect). (Compare, eg "We're visiting Disneyland" in English: normally this indicates present tense, but adding "next July" makes it unambiguously future tense).

Past tense edit

The past tense is expressed with the suffix -t or -ott/-ett/-ött and inflects for person and number. As in the present tense, there are special indefinite forms for intransitive verbs and transitive verbs with direct objects that are 1st or 2nd person or indefinite, while definite forms are used for transitive verbs with definite, 3rd person direct objects, and there is a special form used just for instances where there is a 1st person subject and 2nd person direct object.

As far as the two phonetic variants are concerned, there are three types:

  • Type I never uses link vowel (mostly those with "soft" ending consonants, i.e. sonorants)
  • Type II only uses link vowel in the 3rd person singular indefinite (those that could be regarded as "middle-hard" consonants)
  • Type III uses link vowel in every form (mostly those ending in the "hard" consonant t or a consonant cluster).
Conjugation Type I Type II Type III
Example Verb vár ("wait for somebody/something") mos ("wash somebody/something") tanít ("teach somebody/something")
Direct Object Indefinite Definite Indefinite Definite Indefinite Definite
1st sg. vártam vártam mostam mostam tanítottam tanítottam
2nd sg. vártál vártad mostál mostad tanítottál tanítottad
3rd sg. várt várta mosott mosta tanított tanította
1st pl. vártunk vártuk mostunk mostuk tanítottunk tanítottuk
2nd pl. vártatok vártátok mostatok mostátok tanítottatok tanítottátok
3rd pl. vártak várták mostak mosták tanítottak tanították
1st person subj., 2nd person object vártalak mostalak tanítottalak
Regular endings
  • -l, -r, -n, -ny, -j, -ly (e.g. tanul, ír, pihen, hány, fáj, foly|ik)
  • -ad, -ed (e.g. szalad, ébred)
  • -s, -sz, -z (e.g. ás, úsz|ik, néz)
  • -k, -g, -p, -b, -d*, -v, -f, -gy (e.g. lak|ik, vág, kap, dob, tud, hív, döf, hagy)
  • -at, -et with 2 or more syllables (e.g. mutat, nevet)

*: except for -ad/-ed, see I

  • monosyllabic words ending in t (e.g. hat, vet, nyit, köt, fut, jut, süt, üt, fűt)
  • long vowel + t (e.g. készít, tanít, bocsát)
  • two consonants (e.g. tsz|ik, tart, választ, hall, hull|ik)
    • -dz also belongs here (e.g. edz)
Exceptions
(partial list)
  • áll, száll, varr (III)
  • lát (III) and alkot
  • ad, enged, fogad etc. (I)
  • mond, kezd, küld, hord, küzd etc. (III)

Less important exceptions:

  • (meg)ér|ik (I), függ etc. (III), borzong etc. (III)
×
Note: Strike-through Roman numbers in the last row refer to the types which would apply if the verbs concerned were regular.

If the above phonetic guidelines don't help, it may be useful as a rule of thumb to learn the rules and exceptions only for Type I and Type III and use Type II otherwise, because this latter type comprises the broadest range of verbs.

Regular homonymy of plain and causative forms in the same tense edit

Front-vowel unrounded verbs that end in consonant + -t may have ambiguous (coinciding, homophonous) forms between plain and causative forms forms in writing because the letter 'e' represents two different vowels: ɛ IPA Number 303 and æ IPA Number 325. The syllable 'tet' always contains a closed ɛ in the meaning 1 and always contains an open æ in the meaning 2 in speech. This homonymy only exists in writing if the speaker is sophisticated. •. Approximately a hundred verbs are concerned that end in one of the following endings: -jt, -lt, -mt, -nt, -rt, -st, -szt.

Homoverb Meaning 1 Meaning 2
Megértette. "S/he understood it."
megért ("understand") + -ette (past tense Type III, def.)
"S/he made them understand it."
megért + -et- (causative) + -te (past tense Type II, def.)
Sejtette. "S/he suspected it."
sejt ("suspect") + -ette (past tense type III, def.)
"S/he made them suspect it."
sejt + -et- (causative) + -te (past tense type II, def.)

The past tenses of sejt ("suspect", Type III) and sejtet ("make them suspect something", Type II) are identical, except for the third person indefinite form where it is sejt|ett for sejt, but sejtet|ett for sejtet. However, it usually turns out from the argument structure and the context which meaning is intended.

This ambiguity doesn't occur with back-vowel verbs because the linking vowel is different for the normal past tense and the causative, e.g. bontotta "s/he demolished it" (bont- + -otta) vs. bontatta "s/he had it demolished" (bont- + -at- + -ta). The linking vowel can only be o for back-vowel verbs (as stated above: -ott/-ett/-ött) and the causative can only have a with back vowels (-at/-et). Similarly, it doesn't occur with front-vowel verbs with a rounded vowel, either: e.g. gyűjtötte ("s/he collected them") vs gyűjtette (s/he had them collected").

Below is a chart to review the conjugation differences between coinciding forms of the same verb. Ambiguous forms in the same person are marked in bold.

"I understood it" etc., past, def. "I made them understand it" etc., past, def. "I understood something" etc., past, indef. "I made them understand something" etc., past, indef.
megértettem
megértetted
megértette
megértettük
megértettétek
megértették
megértettem
megértetted
megértette
megértettük
megértettétek
megértették
megértettem
megértettél

megértett
megértettünk
megértettetek
megértettek
megértettem
megértettél

megértetett
megértettünk
megértettetek
megértettek

Regular homonymy: other cases edit

Another kind of ambiguity can arise with type I verbs between the second person plural plain form and the first person singular causative form, e.g. beszéltetek (only indefinite forms involved):

  • "you [pl] spoke": beszél ("speak") + -t- (past) + -etek ("you [pl]")
  • "I make somebody speak": beszél + -tet- (causative) + -ek ("I")

It can also occur with similar back-vowel verbs, e.g. csináltatok "you [pl] did something" or "I have something done".

beszéltek can also have two interpretations (only indefinite forms involved, again) in writing because the letter 'e' represents two different vowels: ɛ IPA Number 303 and æ IPA Number 325:

  • "you [pl] speak": beszél + -tek ("you [pl]")
  • "they spoke": beszél + -t- (past) + -ek ("they")

The syllable 'tek' always contains a closed ɛ in the meaning you [pl] (present) and always contains an open æ in the meaning third person plural past in speech. This homonymy only exists in writing if the speaker is sophisticated.

This latter case is not possible with back-vowel verbs, due to the difference of the linking vowel: csináltok "you [pl] do something" vs. csináltak "they did something". If the affix contains the back-vowel 'o' then it is the counterpart of the front-vowel 'e' which always a closed ɛ. If the affix contains the back-vowel 'a' then it is the counterpart of the front-vowel 'e' which always an open æ.

Below is a chart to review the conjugation differences between coinciding forms of the same verb (again). Ambiguous forms in different persons are marked with asterisks.

"I speak" etc.,
present, indef.
"I spoke" etc.,
past, indef.
"I make somebody speak" etc.,
present, indef.
"I do" etc.,
present, indef.
"I did" etc.,
past, indef.
"I have something done" etc.,
present, indef.
beszélek
beszélsz
beszél
beszélünk
beszéltek*
beszélnek
beszéltem
beszéltél
beszélt
beszéltünk
beszéltetek*
beszéltek*
beszéltetek*
beszéltetsz
beszéltet
beszéltetünk
beszéltettek
beszéltetnek
csinálok
csinálsz
csinál
csinálunk
csináltok
csinálnak
csináltam
csináltál
csinált
csináltunk
csináltatok*
csináltak
csináltatok*
csináltatsz
csináltat
csináltatunk
csináltattok
csináltatnak

Sporadic coincidences edit

Front-vowel verbs in type III that end in -t may cause ambiguity, like between the past tense of a verb and the present tense of another. For example:

Homonymous verb Meaning 1 Meaning 2
Féltem. "I was afraid."
fél ("be afraid") + -tem (past tense type I, first person, indef.)
"I fear for him/her/it."
félt ("fear for somebody/something") + -em (present tense, first person, def.)
Nem ért hozzá. "S/he didn't touch it."
hozzá|ér ("touch") + -t (past tense type I, indef.)
"S/he isn't familiar with it."
ért (hozzá) ("be familiar [with something.]", present tense, indef.)
Köszönt. "S/he said hello."
köszön ("say hello") + -t (past tense type I, indef.)
"S/he welcomes [you]."
köszönt ("welcome", present tense, indef.)
Megbánt valamit. "S/he regretted something."
megbán ("regret") + -t (past tense type I, indef.)
"S/he offends something."
megbánt ("offend", present tense, indef.)

Below is a chart to review the conjugation differences between coinciding forms of unrelated verbs. Ambiguous forms in the same person are marked in bold; ambiguous forms in different persons are marked with asterisks.

"I was afraid" etc., past, indef. "I fear for somebody" etc., present, indef. "I fear for him/her/it" etc., present, def. "I am not familiar with it" etc., present, indef. "I didn't touch it" etc., past, indef.
féltem
féltél
félt
féltünk
féltetek
féltek*
féltek*
féltesz
félt
féltünk
féltetek
féltenek
féltem
félted
félti
féltjük
féltitek
féltik
nem értek hozzá*
nem értesz hozzá
nem ért hozzá
nem értünk hozzá
nem értetek hozzá
nem értenek hozzá
nem értem hozzá
nem értél hozzá
nem ért hozzá
nem értünk hozzá
nem értetek hozzá
nem értek hozzá*

The correct pronunciation of 'féltem' "I was afraid" is 'feltæm'. The correct pronunciation of 'féltem' "I fear for him/her/it" is 'feltɛm'.
The correct pronunciation of 'féltetek' "you were afraid" is 'feltætɛk'. The correct pronunciation of 'féltetek' "you fear for somebody" is 'feltɛtɛk'.
The correct pronunciation of 'féltek' "They were afraid" is 'feltæk'. The correct pronunciation of 'féltek' "I fear for somebody" is 'feltɛk'.
These homonyms only exist in writing if the speaker is sophisticated.

Moods edit

Hungarian verbs have 3 moods: indicative, conditional and subjunctive / imperative. The indicative has a past and non-past tense. The conditional has a non-past tense and a past form, made up of the past tense indicative as the finite verb with the non-finite verb volna. The subjunctive only has a single tense.

Conditional edit

Use of the conditional:

In a sentence with "if", unlike in English, the appropriate conditional tense is used in both the "if" clause and the main clause. The present conditional is used to talk about unlikely or impossible events in the present or future, e.g. Ha találkoznál a királynővel, mit mondanál? ("If you met [lit.: would meet] the Queen, what would you say?"). The past conditional is used for past events which did not happen, e.g. Ha nem találkoztunk volna a királynővel, órákkal ezelőtt megérkeztünk volna. ("If we hadn't [lit.: wouldn't have] met the Queen, we would have arrived hours ago.") (cf. the English counterfactual conditional).

Forms of the conditional edit

Person Indefinite Definite
1st Sg. kérnék, várnék kérném, várnám
2nd Sg. kérnél, várnál kérnéd, várnád
3rd Sg. kérne, várna kér, vár
1st Pl. kérnénk, várnánk kérnénk, várnánk
2nd Pl. kérnétek, várnátok kérnétek, várnátok
3rd Pl. kérnének, várnának kérnék, várnák

The front-vowel suffix at the end of the 1st person singular indefinite form of the back-vowel verb (várnék) is an apparent exception from the vowel harmony: it may serve to distinguish from the 3rd person plural definite form (várnák). (The indefinite kérnék forms still coincide, just like the 1st and 2nd person plural endings.)

The only opposition between the 3rd person singular definite and indefinite forms is vowel length (although a–á and e–é differ in quality as well), which can be considered one of the rare fusional traits in Hungarian.

A linking vowel is inserted into verbs with a consonant cluster or long vowel + t at the end, e.g. festenék 'I would paint', tanítanék 'I would teach', analogously to the rules given for the infinitive form.

Subjunctive (imperative) edit

Uses of the subjunctive:

  1. For a command (i.e. an imperative)
  2. For a request
  3. For hesitant questions with 1st singular subject (cf. English "Shall I …?")
  4. For suggestions for joint action with 1st plural subject (cf. English "Let's …")
  5. For wishes (3rd person singular and plural)
  6. In subordinate clauses after verbs expressing orders, requests, suggestions, wishes, permission, etc.
  7. In hogy subordinate clauses expressing purpose

Forms of the subjunctive edit

In the subjunctive or imperative mood, verbs with a sibilant or t ending differ from the rest, with two groups for the t ending: those with a preceding short vowel, and those with a preceding long vowel or a consonant.

Meanings of the verbs below: kér 'ask (have a request)', vár 'wait', keres 'look for', olvas 'read', fest 'paint', szeret 'love', fut 'run', ment 'save', tanít 'teach', böngészik 'browse', mászik 'climb', ereszt 'let go', akaszt 'hang', néz 'look at', húz 'pull', edz 'train', lopódzik 'sneak'.

INDEFINITE CONJUGATION
Stem Forms kér, vár keres, olvas szeret, fut ment, tanít böngészik, mászik ereszt, akaszt z, húz edz, lopódzik
Original Stem (all but the following) -S short vowel
+ T
other
+ T
-SZ -SZT -Z -DZ
Altered Stem above
+ J
SS TS SSZ ZZ DDZ
1st Sg kérjek, várjak keressek, olvassak szeressek, fussak mentsek, tanítsak böngésszek, másszak eresszek, akasszak nézzek, húzzak eddzek, lopóddzak
2nd Sg kérj(él),
várj(ál)
keress(él),
olvass(ál)
szeress(él),
fuss(ál)
ments(él),
taníts(ál)
böngéssz(él),
mássz(ál)
eressz(él),
akassz(ál)
nézz(él),
húzz(ál)
eddz(él),
lopóddz(ál)
3rd Sg kérjen, várjon keressen, olvasson szeressen, fusson mentsen, tanítson böngésszen, másszon eresszen, akasszon nézzen, húzzon eddzen, lopóddzon
1st Pl kérjünk, várjunk keressünk, olvassunk szeressünk, fussunk mentsünk, tanítsunk böngésszünk, másszunk eresszünk, akasszunk nézzünk, húzzunk eddzünk, lopóddzunk
2nd Pl kérjetek, várjatok keressetek, olvassatok szeressetek, fussatok mentsetek, tanítsatok böngésszetek, másszatok eresszetek, akasszatok nézzetek, húzzatok eddzetek, lopóddzatok
3rd Pl kérjenek, várjanak keressenek, olvassanak szeressenek, fussanak mentsenek, tanítsanak böngésszenek, másszanak eresszenek, akasszanak nézzenek, húzzanak eddzenek, lopóddzanak
DEFINITE CONJUGATION
Stem Forms kér, vár keres, olvas szeret, fut ment, tanít böngészik, mászik ereszt, akaszt z, húz edz, lopódzik
Original Stem (all but the following) -S short vowel
+ T
other
+ T
-SZ -SZT -Z -DZ
Altered Stem above
+ J
SS TS SSZ ZZ DDZ
1st Sg kérjem, várjam keressem, olvassam szeressem, fussam mentsem, tanítsam böngésszem, másszam eresszem, akasszam nézzem, húzzam eddzem, lopóddzam
2nd Sg kér(je)d,
vár(ja)d
keres(se)d,
olvas(sa)d
szeres(se)d,
fus(sa)d
ments(e)d,
taníts(a)d
böngészd/böngésszed,
mászd/másszad
ereszd/eresszed,
akaszd/akasszad
néz(ze)d,
húz(za)d
edzd/eddzed,
lopódzd/lopóddzad
3rd Sg kérje,
=várja
keresse,
=olvassa
szeresse,
fussa
mentse,
tanítsa
böngéssze,
=mássza
eressze,
akassza
nézze,
=húzza
eddze,
=lopóddza
1st Pl kérjük,
=várjuk
=keressük,
=olvassuk
szeressük,
fussuk
mentsük,
tanítsuk
=böngésszük,
=másszuk
eresszük,
akasszuk
=nézzük,
=húzzuk
=eddzük,
=lopóddzuk
2nd Pl kérjétek, =várjátok keressétek, =olvassátok szeressétek, fussátok mentsétek, tanítsátok böngésszétek, =másszátok eresszétek, akasszátok nézzétek, =húzzátok eddzétek, =lopóddzátok
3rd Pl kérjék,
=várják
keressék,
=olvassák
szeressék,
fussák
mentsék,
tanítsák
böngésszék,
=másszák
eresszék,
akasszák
nézzék,
=húzzák
eddzék,
=lopóddzák
1st > 2nd kérjelek, várjalak keresselek, olvassalak szeresselek, *fussalak mentselek, tanítsalak böngésszelek, másszalak eresszelek, akasszalak nézzelek, húzzalak eddzelek, *lopóddzalak

Note 1: Fest 'paint' is the only single example (according to the Reverse-alphabetical dictionary of the Hungarian Language) that ends in st, and there is no -ik verb with these two ending consonants. This verb is conjugated like the szeret, fut type: fessek, fess(él), fessen, fessünk, fessetek, fessenek; fessem, fes(se)d, fesse, fessük, fessétek, fessék; fesselek.

Note 2: the definite conjugation may be ungrammatical for verbs that cannot have an object, e.g. fut 'run', lopódzik 'sneak'. However, these forms may occur in constructions like végigfutja a távot 'run all through the distance', or perhaps even végiglopóddza az épületeket 'sneak through the buildings'. This solution doesn't work, though, for the forms affecting the 2nd person (unless in a poetic, vocative sense), that is why they are marked with an asterisk.

Forms marked with a preceding equality sign are identical with the indicative forms.

Second person forms have a short and a long variant both in indefinite and definite conjugation, with minimal difference in style.

Definite and indefinite conjugations edit

In Hungarian, verbs not only show agreement with their subjects but also carry information on the definiteness of their direct objects. This results in two types of conjugations: definite (used if there is a definite object) and indefinite (if there is no definite object):

  Verb with suffix for
present tense, 1st person singular
Object
Intransitive verb
Olvasok (I'm reading)
(type 1 ― suffix indicating no definite object)
Transitive verb
with an indefinite object
egy könyvet. (a book)
with a definite object
Olvasom (I'm reading it)
(type 2 ― suffix indicating definite object)
a könyvet. (the book)

Basically, the indefinite conjugation is used if there is no definite object, that is i) if there is no object at all, or ii) if the object is indefinite (see details below). However, exceptionally, the indefinite conjugation is also used if the object is a 1st- or 2nd-person pronoun, either stated or not (even though the reference of personal pronouns is definite by nature).

An object is indefinite if it is:

  1. a noun with no determiner
  2. a noun with an indefinite article
  3. a noun with a numeral or an indefinite determiner (e.g. "any, some, every" but not "all [the]")
  4. an indefinite pronoun such as "something, anything, everyone" etc.
  5. an interrogative pronoun (except "which?")
  6. a first- or second-person pronoun, whether stated or unstated
  7. a relative pronoun

The definite conjugation is used if the verb has a definite object, which can be:

  1. a proper noun (some types with zero article, other types preceded by a definite article)
  2. a noun with a definite article
  3. a noun with the determiners melyik, hányadik ('which'), mindegyik ('each'), or az összes ('all'); the noun may be omitted in these constructions
  4. a 3rd-person pronoun, either stated or unstated
  5. the reflexive pronoun (a form of maga, '-self')
  6. a demonstrative pronoun ("this, that")
  7. the indefinite pronoun mind ('all [of something]'), including mindkét ('both'), or a noun phrase determined by it
  8. a subordinate clause (like "[the fact] that…" or "if/whether…")

A special suffix (-lak/-lek) is used if the verb has a first-person singular subject AND a second-person (singular or plural) object (in the informal conjugation), e.g. Szeretlek. ("I love you" ― singular), Szeretlek titeket. ("I love you all" ― plural).

Examples:

Indefinite (látsz) Definite (látod)
You (can) see .
You can see something.
You can see a book.
You can see me/us. (!)
You can see some/two.
You can't see anything/anyone.
You can see everything/everyone.
Who/What/How many can you see?
The person/book (that/which) you can see is…
You can see the book.
You can see this book.
You can see him/her/it/them.
You can see yourself.
You can see Mary.
You can see both (books).
You can see all (the books).
Which (person/book) can you see?
You can see (that) I'm here.

No explicit object edit

If no explicit object is present, the most common interpretation of the definite verb forms is including "him/her/it". If an indefinite verb form semantically requires an object, "me" or "you [sg]" or – obviously – an indefinite object (third person) can be inferred: "something". (The plural forms are generally made explicit.) This difference makes it possible for the writer or speaker to refer to people without making them explicit. In most cases it is enough through the context to differentiate between 3rd-person and non-3rd-person pronouns.

Definite examples:

  • olvassa ("s/he is reading") – most common meaning: s/he is reading it (the book etc.)
  • nézi ("s/he is looking") – most common meaning: s/he is looking at him/her/it

Indefinite examples:

  • fut ("s/he is running") – usually can't have an object so its meaning is unambiguous
  • olvas ("s/he is reading") – most common meaning: s/he is reading something (the object may be omitted like in English)
  • néz ("s/he is looking") – most common meaning: s/he is looking at me or you (or: gazing in the air)

Grammatical voice edit

Hungarian uses active forms not only in the active sense (e.g. "He opened the door") and in the middle voice sense (e.g. "The door opened"), but also to express the passive (e.g. "The door was opened by Jane"), with the third person plural active form. For example, Megvizsgálják a gyereket literally means "They examine the child", but it is more commonly meant like "The child is examined". The fact that this sentence behaves like a passive voice is shown by the fact that the above (third person plural) form can be used even when only one agent is meant (i.e., the child is examined by one doctor).

Another means to express the passive meaning is using middle voice lexical forms or unaccusative verbs, e.g. épül: "build"/ intransitive (cf. épít "build"/ transitive), alakul: "form"/ intransitive (cf. alakít "form"/ transitive). -ul/-ül is a common ending that expresses the middle voice, as opposed to -ít which expresses the active (these are transitive verbs). Middle voice forms can also be created from some plain verbs by adding -ódik/-ődik, e.g. íródik "get written" (from ír "write"), ütődik "get hit" (from üt "hit"). These active/middle pairs comprise a considerable part among Hungarian verbs.

In the perfect, there is a third way to express passive meaning: the existential verb van (see van (to be)) plus the adverbial participle ending in -va/-ve (see Adverb derivation), e.g. meg van írva "it is written" (from megír "write"). It is used when the result of the action is emphasized. It can be formed in the past perfect and future perfect, too, with the past and future forms of van. – A similar structure is used in a past meaning with lett: meg lett írva "it was written" or "it has been written" (sometimes "it had been written").

Finally, the actual passive form does occur once in a while, formed with -atik/-etik or -tatik/-tetik. For example: születik ("be born", from szül "give birth"), adatik ("be given", from ad "give"), viseltetik ("owe somebody certain feelings", from visel "bear"), foglaltatik ("be included", from (magába) foglal "include"). These can be formed by adding -ik to the causative (see Modal and causative suffixes). Most of these forms (except for születik) are considered obsolete.

An example of a regular verb edit

Here is a regular verb, kér ("ask", "have a request"). The personal suffixes are marked in bold.

kér ("ask")
Indefinite Definite
Indicative Mood
Present kérek kérsz kér kérünk kértek kérnek kérem kéred kéri kérjük kéritek kérik
Past kértem kértél kért kértünk kértetek kértek kértem kérted kérte kértük kértétek kérték
Conditional Mood
Present kérnék kérnél kérne kérnénk kérnétek kérnének kérném kérnéd kérné kérnénk kérnétek kérnék
Past kértem
volna
kértél
volna
kért
volna
kértünk
volna
kértetek
volna
kértek
volna
kértem
volna
kérted
volna
kérte
volna
kértük
volna
kértétek
volna
kérték
volna
Subjunctive Mood
Present kérjek kérjél
or kérj
kérjen kérjünk kérjetek kérjenek kérjem kérjed
or kérd
kérje kérjük kérjétek kérjék

Modal and causative suffixes edit

Hungarian has 2 forms which can be added to the verb stem to modify the meaning. These are sometimes referred to as "infixes", but they are not true infixes because they are not inserted inside another morpheme.

-hat-/-het- has a modal meaning of permission or opportunity, e.g. beszélek "I speak", beszélhetek "I may speak" or "I am allowed to speak".

Note: Ability ("I can speak") is usually expressed with "tud". See Auxiliary verbs (modal and temporal).

-at-/-et- and -tat-/-tet- have a causative meaning. It can express "having something done" or "having/making someone do something". For example: beszélek "I speak", beszéltetek "I make somebody speak". (Incidentally, it is the same form as "you [pl] spoke", analysed beszél|t|etek, see Past tense.)

-tat/-tet is used if the word ends in vowel + -t or if the stem ends in a consonant different from -t, but it has two or more syllables (excluding the verbal particle). In other cases, -at/-et is used: that is, with words ending in a consonant + t and with one-syllable words ending in a consonant different from -t.

Ending -t not -t
vowel + -t consonant + -t
One syllable süttet "to have something baked", láttat "to make something seen" gyűjtet "to have something collected", festet "to have something painted" írat "to have something written", mosat "to have something washed", fürdet "to give somebody a bath"
Also: ki+dobat "to have somebody thrown out", el+fogat "to have somebody caught"
(See the exceptions below)
Several syllables taníttat "to have somebody taught", felszólíttat "to have somebody warned" felébresztet "to have somebody woken up", halasztat "to have something postponed" beszéltet "to have somebody speak", dolgoztat "to make somebody work", olvastat "to have somebody read"

The monosyllabic words which don't end in vowel + -t, but have -tat/-tet in the causative are áz·ik (áztat), buk·ik (buktat), kop·ik (koptat), él (éltet), kel (keltet), lép (léptet), szűn·ik (szüntet [!]), szök·ik (szöktet).

Some monosyllabic words not ending in vowel + -t have both -at/-et and -tat/-tet as causative forms, with differences in meaning. For example:

  • szop·ik (szopat: to make someone suck on something; szoptat: to allow someone to suck on something, e.g. during breastfeeding)
  • hány[5][6] (hányat: to make someone throw something (e.g. firewood) into a heap; hánytat: to help someone vomit)
  • jár[7][8] (járat: to ensure someone (e.g. a child) goes somewhere (e.g. to school) regularly, to start and operate (e.g. a machine); jártat: to lead someone or something (e.g. an animal) while walking).

Verbal noun edit

A noun is formed from a verb by adding -ás/-és to the verb stem (cf. gerund in English), e.g. Az úszás egészséges. ("Swimming is healthy.")

Participles edit

There are three participles in Hungarian. They are formed by adding the following suffixes to the verb stem:

  • -ó/-ő - present participle, e.g. író ember ("a writing person")
  • -ott/-ett/-ött/-t - past participle, e.g. megírt levél ("a written letter" /"the letter that has been written")
  • -andó/-endő - future participle, e.g. írandó levél ("a letter to be written")

Since the past participle usually expresses a perfected action/event, the verb sometimes changes into its perfective counterpart by taking a verbal particle (igekötő) with this function, as seen in the above example (megírt levél). This verbal particle may, however, be replaced by a noun, e.g. Annának írt levél ("a letter written to Anna"). – See more under Hungarian syntax.

Verb particles /prefixes (igekötők) edit

Hungarian verbs can have verb particles or prefixes, similar to phrasal verbs in English. The most common ones are meg- (perfective, but some other ones, too, can take this function), fel- ("up"), le- ("down"/"off"), be- ("in"), ki- ("out"), el- ("away"), vissza- ("back"), át- ("over"/"through"), oda- ("there"), ide- ("here"), össze- ("together"), szét- ("apart"), "rá-" ("on top").

The above meanings are the literal meanings, but they all can have figurative, idiomatic meanings. Examples of literal meanings for the verb ír ("write"): leír ("write down"), beír ("write into") as opposed to the non-literal meanings: leír ("declare as useless", cf "write off"), beír ("give a written warning [to a schoolchild]"). Different prefixes can express subtle differences (e.g. meghízik "get fat" vs. elhízik "get obese", literally "fatten away") as well as independent concepts (e.g. rúg "kick", kirúg "fire somebody", berúg "get drunk"). They often serve to change the verb into perfective (along with other factors).

When the particle precedes the verb without any other inserted word, they are used as one word, e.g. Leírja ("He writes it down"). Syntactically, the particle may go behind the verb for various reasons. It may occur due to a stressed part in the sentence (the focus), e.g. Ő írja le ("It's him who writes it down") or a negation, e.g. Nem írja le ("He doesn't write it down"). The inverted order is also used in the imperative, e.g. Írja le! ("Write it down!"). Finally, it may also refer to continuity, like Lement a lépcsőn ("He went down the stairs") vs. Ment le a lépcsőn ("He was going down the stairs").

If the verb with the particle is in the infinitive, the finite verb will be wedged between them, e.g. Le akarja írni ("He wants to write it down") or Le tudja írni ("He can write it down").

The particle may considerably affect the case of the complement: for example, the verb kezd ("start something") can take several different verb particles, all expressing the same concept (with minor differences), but their complement differs depending on the particle:

It happens because certain verb particles (the latter three among the examples) come from personal pronouns in the given case and they require agreement.

When giving a short positive answer to a yes/no question, the particle can refer back to the whole sentence, see Yes/no questions.

In literary style, articles can be reduplicated to indicate a gradual or stuttering action: ki-kijött a mὁkus ("the squirrel crept out").

Cases needing attention edit

There are a few words which appear to begin with a particle, but don't actually, e.g. felel ("reply"), lehel ("breathe/puff"), kiált ("give a shout") and beszél ("speak") where fel-, le-, ki- and be- are parts of the words themselves, rather than actual particles. The difference is important in the above-mentioned syntactic cases when these elements will – naturally – not function like particles do. Compare the above kiált (no compound) with ki|áll ("stand out", a compound): nem kiált ("he doesn't give a shout"), but nem áll ki ("he doesn't stand out"). – A similar case is fellebbez ("appeal [in court]"), from the adverb fellebb ("upper", today: feljebb), containing no particle.

A verb may occasionally be a homonym in the above sense, i.e. being a single word or containing a particle, e.g. betűz ("spell [by letters]", no compound), but be|tűz ("stick in" or "shine in", a compound).

The other misleading cases are those verbs which were historically formed from nouns derived from verbs with particles, so they seemingly begin with particles, but they don't behave like them. An example is befolyásol ("influence", v) which derives from befolyás ("influence", n), a calque from German Einfluß, literally "in-flow", including the particle be- ("in"). This element, being part of the original noun, will not act as a particle of the derived verb befolyásol. There are few such words, e.g. kivitelez ("implement") from kivitel ("implementation, execution", cf "carrying out"). Kirándul ("go hiking") used to be a compound (ki + rándul), but people don't usually treat it like that anymore so they say, e.g., Kirándulni akar. ("s/he wants to go hiking") instead of Ki akar rándulni, which is obsolete and only used jokingly. A common error among native speakers is the case of feltételez ("suppose" or "assume"), which comes from feltétel ("condition"), so the prefix is only part of the embedded noun, rather than of the full verb, but it is still often separated: ?fel sem tételezhetjük, ?fel kell tételeznünk ("we can't even assume, we must suppose"), instead of the correct forms nem is feltételezhetjük, feltételeznünk kell. What functions as a verbal prefix sometimes may not be one other times, e.g. ellenáll 'resist' can separate like nem állok ellen 'I don't resist', but ellenőriz 'check' stays together like nem ellenőrzök 'I don't check' – because the latter is derived from the noun ellenőr ("inspector").

Auxiliary verbs (modal and temporal) edit

Most Hungarian auxiliary verbs are impersonal; beside them, the suffixed infinitive is used. A few are conjugated. (Note: personal suffixes are marked in bold.)

Auxiliary verb Meaning Form Example with meaning
kell obligation impersonal kell mennem I must/have to go
kellene /kéne advice & suggestions impersonal kellene mennem
kéne mennem
I should/ought to go
muszáj strong obligation impersonal muszáj mennem I have got to go
szabad permission impersonal szabad mennem I am allowed to go
tilos prohibition impersonal tilos mennem I must not go
fog future intention conjugated fogok menni I am going to go
tud ability conjugated tudok menni I can go
Modal suffix
-hat/-het opportunity, permission conjugated mehetek I can go
I may go

The suffix -hat/-het mentioned in the last row can be further conjugated, just like any verb.

The verb lehet is used impersonally, e.g. oda lehet menni "one can go there".

The verb szokik edit

The verb szokik is conjugated like a regular past tense one (though it can have the indefinite and the definite forms, too), however, used with an infinitive, it has the meaning of a habitual action which includes the present time.

Examples:

  • Szoktam álmodni ("I dream usually")
  • Meg szoktam mosni ("I usually wash it")

Irregular verbs edit

The verbs van ("to be"), jön ("to come") and megy ("to go") have an irregular present tense and irregular stems for different tenses. jön also has irregular forms in the subjunctive. A further group of 9 verbs have irregular stems for different tenses, but follow the same pattern of irregularity as each other. A few other verbs shorten or drop a vowel with certain suffixes.

A regular verb compared to an irregular
Regular verb: él (to live) Irregular verb: megy (to go)
Past Present Past Present
éltem élek mentem megyek
éltél élsz mentél mész (sometimes also mégy)
élt él ment megy
éltünk élünk mentünk megyünk
éltetek éltek mentetek mentek
éltek élnek mentek mennek

van (to be) edit

The verb "to be" in Hungarian is van (3rd person), lenni (infinitive).

Use edit

When the verb is used as a copula i.e. if one speaks about what someone or something is, it is omitted in the third person singular and plural of the present tense. The verb is required in all other tenses and persons when speaking about where or how something is, or to emphasize the existence or availability of something. Examples:

  • Péter orvos . – Peter is a doctor. (present tense, third person, speaking about what someone is: no linking verb in Hungarian)
  • Péter jól van. – Peter is well.
  • Péter itt van. – Peter is here.
  • Péter orvos volt. – Peter was a doctor.
  • Orvos vagyok. – I am a doctor.

The non-copula form of van is also used to express the equivalent of "There is/are":

  • Van orvos a szobában.There is a doctor in the room.

The negation of the third person van (plural vannak) as a non-copula verb is the suppletive nincs (plural nincsenek):

  • Itt van Péter. – Peter is here.
  • Nincs itt Péter. – Peter isn't here.

Hungarian has no verb which is equivalent to "to have". Instead, ownership/possession are expressed using van with a possessive suffix on the noun:

  • Van könyvem. ("I have a book.", literally "There-is book-my")

Conjugation edit

Like the verb "to be" in many other languages, van is irregular. It comes from three (or four) bases: vagy- (or van-), vol-, and len-. These overlap to some extent with the verb lesz ("become"). As it cannot have an object, it does not have definite forms. It is the only verb in Hungarian which has a future form.

Indicative Mood
Present Tense vagyok vagy van vagyunk vagytok vannak
Past Tense voltam voltál volt voltunk voltatok voltak
Future Tense leszek leszel lesz leszünk lesztek lesznek
Conditional Mood
Present Tense lennék
or volnék
lennél
or volnál
lenne
or volna
lennénk
or volnánk
lennétek
or volnátok
lennének
or volnának
Past Tense lettem
volna
lettél
volna
lett
volna
lettünk
volna
lettetek
volna
lettek
volna
Subjunctive Mood
Present Tense legyek legyél
or légy
legyen legyünk legyetek legyenek

There is little difference between the two conditional forms. In theory, lennék etc. are preferred when an option is considered as possible (e.g. Ha otthon lennék, "if I were at home") and volnék etc. are preferred when it is considered impossible (e.g. Ha rózsa volnék, "if I were a rose"), but the limits are rather vague. It is probably not by chance that the former is akin to the future form (leszek), which might still become true, and the latter to the past form (voltam), which is already determined. In practice, the lennék series is somewhat more frequently used in both senses.

External links edit

  1. ^ Verbs selected from Ragozgató 2010-07-21 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Verbs are mostly selected from Ragozgató 2010-07-21 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "Hol a rosszaság mostanában?". from the original on 2012-02-20. Retrieved 2013-09-12.
  4. ^ "Könyörgöm, könyörgök". from the original on 2013-06-02. Retrieved 2013-09-12.
  5. ^ "hány: Magyar etimológiai szótár | Kézikönyvtár". www.arcanum.com (in Hungarian). Arcanum. Retrieved 26 June 2023.
  6. ^ "hány (ige) származékszavai". e-nyelv.hu (in Hungarian). Magyar Nyelvi Szolgáltató Iroda. Retrieved 26 June 2023.
  7. ^ "járat: A magyar nyelv értelmező szótára". www.arcanum.com (in Hungarian). Arcanum. Retrieved 26 June 2023.
  8. ^ "jártat: A magyar nyelv értelmező szótára | Kézikönyvtár". www.arcanum.com (in Hungarian). Arcanum. Retrieved 26 June 2023.
  • Hungarian verb conjugator, with opportunity for testing and practising
  • Online morphology charts at the website of the Research Institute for Linguistics of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
  • Hungarian verb conjugator Jargot.com's verb conjugator

hungarian, verbs, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, technical, most, readers, understand, please, help, improve, make, understandable, expe. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may be too technical for most readers to understand Please help improve it to make it understandable to non experts without removing the technical details January 2018 Learn how and when to remove this message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Hungarian verbs news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2011 Learn how and when to remove this message This article contains instructions advice or how to content Please help rewrite the content so that it is more encyclopedic or move it to Wikiversity Wikibooks or Wikivoyage January 2018 This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article December 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message This page is about verbs in Hungarian grammar Contents 1 Lemma or citation form 1 1 ik verbs 2 Infinitive 2 1 Infinitive with personal suffixes 3 Tenses 3 1 Present 3 2 Futurity 3 3 Past tense 3 3 1 Regular homonymy of plain and causative forms in the same tense 3 3 2 Regular homonymy other cases 3 3 3 Sporadic coincidences 4 Moods 4 1 Conditional 4 1 1 Forms of the conditional 4 2 Subjunctive imperative 4 2 1 Forms of the subjunctive 5 Definite and indefinite conjugations 5 1 No explicit object 6 Grammatical voice 7 An example of a regular verb 8 Modal and causative suffixes 9 Verbal noun 10 Participles 11 Verb particles prefixes igekotok 11 1 Cases needing attention 12 Auxiliary verbs modal and temporal 13 The verb szokik 14 Irregular verbs 15 van to be 15 1 Use 15 2 Conjugation 16 External linksLemma or citation form editThere 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 person singular indefinite present This usually has a suffix e g ker ask have a request ik verbs edit A slight variation to the standard pattern is with certain verbs which have third person singular indefinite present ending with ik e g dolgozik s he works and 1st singular indefinite present usually with om em om The stem for this is reached by removing ik These verbs are one of the reasons why this form is the citation form The ik verbs were originally middle voice reflexive or passive in meaning which can still be seen e g about the pair tor s he breaks something vs torik something breaks something gets broken However most of them have lost this connection they can have active meanings so historically speaking they are like deponent verbs Some verb pairs only differ in the presence or absence of the ik ending while they are unrelated in meaning such as er be worth something or arrive and erik ripen With these verbs the third person singular present indefinite indicative form i e the lemma consistently uses the ik form What is more new ik words continue to be created e g netezik use the Internet However the first person singular present indefinite indicative suffix is often assimilated to the normal conjugation as it has happened to the other ik specific forms so most verbs usually take the regular form for this person e g hazudok hazudom would be taken as hypercorrect or incorrect Nevertheless with some basic ik verbs the assimilated variant is stigmatized e g eszem is expected in educated speech rather than eszek so with these verbs the traditional form is advised At any rate such non traditional assimilated variants are not rare in colloquial spoken language Since this 3rd person singular indefinite ik ending coincides with the ik ending of the 3rd person plural definite form only the type of the object makes it possible to identify the subject eszik egy almat egy almat an apple is indefinite so the verb must be a singular form i e s he is eating an apple eszik az almat az almat the apple is definite so the verb must be a plural form i e they are eating the apple In fact most ik verbs are intransitive and the context may clarify the question even if the subject is not made explicit Regular non ik verbs Non traditional Traditional ik verbs 1st person singularindefinite kerek hazudok eszem eszek 3rd person singularindefinite lemma ker hazudik eszik Meaning ask request tell a lie eat Some important traditional ik verbs are the following A person may appear uneducated if s he uses the k ending with them for the 1st person singular form aggodik worry almodik dream alszik sleep bizik trust dicsekszik brag dohanyzik smoke dolgozik work emlekszik remember erdeklodik be interested or inquire erkezik arrive eskuszik swear eszik eat fazik be cold fekszik lie recline foglalkozik deal with gondolkodik or gondolkozik be thinking gondoskodik look after gyanakszik suspect gyonyorkodik delight in hallatszik be audible haragszik be angry hianyzik be missing igyekszik strive hurry iszik drink jatszik play jelentkezik apply koltozik move residence kovetkezik follow kulonbozik differ lakik live inhabit latszik be visible mukodik function novekszik grow nyugszik rest oregszik grow old panaszkodik complain szarmazik originate from talalkozik meet tartozik owe or belong tartozkodik stay reside torodik care about unatkozik be bored vagyik desire valtozik change refl verekszik fight e g at school veszekszik quarrel vetkozik take off clothes viselkedik behave and vitatkozik argue 1 For most other verbs the k ending is common in the indefinite meaning especially in casual speech Verbs ending in zik which refer to using some tool almost exclusively take the k such as biciklizik ride the bicycle gitarozik play the guitar or mobilozik use the mobile phone There are a few non traditional ik verbs where the m ending is impossible and ungrammatical except in the definite conjugation if meaningful These are called pseudo ik verbs alikes igek in Hungarian Examples bomlik dissolve el bujik hide egereszik catch mice erik ripen folyik flow gyulik assemble refl hazudik tell a lie hullik fall illik suit kopik wear off megjelenik appear mulik pass nyilik open refl omlik pour refl szuletik be born meg szunik discontinue telik fill up tojik lay eggs torik get broken tunik seem valik become or divorce zullik become depraved 2 The regular non ik verb konyorog beg has a hypercorrect first person singular indefinite present form konyorgom I am begging used especially as an emphatic interjection to support an argument in spoken language which conjugation mimics that of ik verbs The correct form would be konyorgok However it is argued by some 3 4 that the form konyorgom is not unacceptable either and it reflects an idiomatic expression konyorgom magat az Istent I am begging you God which has eventually lost its object and in which the form konyorgom actually correctly follows definite conjugation Infinitive editThe infinitive of a verb is the form suffixed by ni e g varni kerni There is a variant ani eni which is used with the following groups verbs ending in two consonants e g jatszani tartani kuldeni valasztani festeni mondani hallani ajanlani verbs ending in a long vowel t e g futeni veteni tanitani bocsatani and the words ved and edz vedeni and edzeni respectively Exceptions are allni to stand szallni to fly varrni to sew forrni to boil which have ni despite the two consonants This is due to the fact that in written language the long l or r of the stem has to be kept even in the forms where it is pronounced short Infinitive with personal suffixes edit When an infinitive is used with an impersonal verb the personal suffixes may be added to the infinitive to indicate the person as in Portuguese Except in the 3rd person singular and plural the i of the infinitive is dropped e g Mennem kell I have to go The person can also be indicated using nak nek e g Nekem kell mennem I have to go Janosnak mennie kell Janos has to go These forms use the o e o set of suffixes Type II like possessive suffixes do see Personal suffixes and link vowels Person menni to go latni to see for me to go etc for me to see etc 1st Sg mennem latnom 2nd Sg menned latnod 3rd Sg mennie latnia 1st Pl mennunk latnunk 2nd Pl mennetek latnotok 3rd Pl menniuk latniukTenses editMost verbs have two inflected tenses past and present and a future form using an auxiliary verb The verb lenni to be has three inflected tenses past volt was present van is and future lesz will be Present edit In the present tense only sibilant ending verbs differ from the rest such as verbs ending in s sz z and dz The chart below compares the conjugation of the regular ker ask have a request and var wait as examples for front and back vowels with the sibilant ending keres look for and maszik climb Example of verbs ending in the other two possible sonorants z and dz are huz pull and edz train which similarly double their stem consonants where s and sz are doubled e g huzzuk eddzuk in the first person plural Person Indefinite conjugation Definite conjugation Regular Sibilant ending Regular Sibilant ending 1st Sg kerek varok keresek maszok kerem varom keresem maszom 2nd Sg kersz varsz keresel maszol kered varod keresed maszod 3rd Sg ker var keres maszik keri varja keresi massza 1st Pl kerunk varunk keresunk maszunk kerjuk varjuk keressuk masszuk 2nd Pl kertek vartok kerestek masztok keritek varjatok keresitek masszatok 3rd Pl kernek varnak keresnek masznak kerik varjak keresik masszak 1st gt 2nd e g I ask you kerlek varlak kereslek maszlak N A N A maszik being an ik verb its indefinite 1st person singular form can be maszom instead of maszok in literary style The ik ending in its indefinite 3rd person singular form naturally doesn t apply to verbs without this ending The forms marked in bold are those where the suffix of sibilant ending verbs differ from the suffix of other verbs either because of the alternative 2nd person ending l to avoid two sibilants getting next to each other or because of the assimilation of j Incidentally the latter forms with doubled stem consonants coincide with the subjunctive or imperative forms Futurity edit Futurity can be expressed in a variety of ways By the auxiliary verb fog for any verb expressing a strong intention or a necessity of events brought about by circumstances fog menni will go fog beszelni will speak fog lenni will be The verb van uniquely has an inflected future tense leszek leszel etc See van to be By the present tense when this is clearly a reference to a future time e g the presence of explicit temporal adverbs e g majd soon or in the case of verbs with perfective aspect Compare eg We re visiting Disneyland in English normally this indicates present tense but adding next July makes it unambiguously future tense Past tense edit The past tense is expressed with the suffix t or ott ett ott and inflects for person and number As in the present tense there are special indefinite forms for intransitive verbs and transitive verbs with direct objects that are 1st or 2nd person or indefinite while definite forms are used for transitive verbs with definite 3rd person direct objects and there is a special form used just for instances where there is a 1st person subject and 2nd person direct object As far as the two phonetic variants are concerned there are three types Type I never uses link vowel mostly those with soft ending consonants i e sonorants Type II only uses link vowel in the 3rd person singular indefinite those that could be regarded as middle hard consonants Type III uses link vowel in every form mostly those ending in the hard consonant t or a consonant cluster Conjugation Type I Type II Type III Example Verb var wait for somebody something mos wash somebody something tanit teach somebody something Direct Object Indefinite Definite Indefinite Definite Indefinite Definite 1st sg vartam vartam mostam mostam tanitottam tanitottam 2nd sg vartal vartad mostal mostad tanitottal tanitottad 3rd sg vart varta mosott mosta tanitott tanitotta 1st pl vartunk vartuk mostunk mostuk tanitottunk tanitottuk 2nd pl vartatok vartatok mostatok mostatok tanitottatok tanitottatok 3rd pl vartak vartak mostak mostak tanitottak tanitottak 1st person subj 2nd person object vartalak mostalak tanitottalak Regular endings l r n ny j ly e g tanul ir pihen hany faj foly ik ad ed e g szalad ebred s sz z e g as usz ik nez k g p b d v f gy e g lak ik vag kap dob tud hiv dof hagy at et with 2 or more syllables e g mutat nevet except for ad ed see I monosyllabic words ending in t e g hat vet nyit kot fut jut sut ut fut long vowel t e g keszit tanit bocsat two consonants e g jatsz ik tart valaszt hall hull ik dz also belongs here e g edz Exceptions partial list all szall varr III lat III and alkot ad enged fogad etc I mond kezd kuld hord kuzd etc III Less important exceptions meg er ik I fugg etc III borzong etc III Note Strike through Roman numbers in the last row refer to the types which would apply if the verbs concerned were regular If the above phonetic guidelines don t help it may be useful as a rule of thumb to learn the rules and exceptions only for Type I and Type III and use Type II otherwise because this latter type comprises the broadest range of verbs Regular homonymy of plain and causative forms in the same tense edit Front vowel unrounded verbs that end in consonant t may have ambiguous coinciding homophonous forms between plain and causative forms forms in writing because the letter e represents two different vowels ɛ IPA Number 303 and ae IPA Number 325 The syllable tet always contains a closed ɛ in the meaning 1 and always contains an open ae in the meaning 2 in speech This homonymy only exists in writing if the speaker is sophisticated Approximately a hundred verbs are concerned that end in one of the following endings jt lt mt nt rt st szt Homoverb Meaning 1 Meaning 2 Megertette S he understood it megert understand ette past tense Type III def S he made them understand it megert et causative te past tense Type II def Sejtette S he suspected it sejt suspect ette past tense type III def S he made them suspect it sejt et causative te past tense type II def The past tenses of sejt suspect Type III and sejtet make them suspect something Type II are identical except for the third person indefinite form where it is sejt ett for sejt but sejtet ett for sejtet However it usually turns out from the argument structure and the context which meaning is intended This ambiguity doesn t occur with back vowel verbs because the linking vowel is different for the normal past tense and the causative e g bontotta s he demolished it bont otta vs bontatta s he had it demolished bont at ta The linking vowel can only be o for back vowel verbs as stated above ott ett ott and the causative can only have a with back vowels at et Similarly it doesn t occur with front vowel verbs with a rounded vowel either e g gyujtotte s he collected them vs gyujtette s he had them collected Below is a chart to review the conjugation differences between coinciding forms of the same verb Ambiguous forms in the same person are marked in bold I understood it etc past def I made them understand it etc past def I understood something etc past indef I made them understand something etc past indef megertettemmegertettedmegertettemegertettukmegertettetekmegertettek megertettemmegertettedmegertettemegertettukmegertettetekmegertettek megertettemmegertettelmegertettmegertettunkmegertettetekmegertettek megertettemmegertettelmegertetettmegertettunkmegertettetekmegertettek Regular homonymy other cases edit Another kind of ambiguity can arise with type I verbs between the second person plural plain form and the first person singular causative form e g beszeltetek only indefinite forms involved you pl spoke beszel speak t past etek you pl I make somebody speak beszel tet causative ek I It can also occur with similar back vowel verbs e g csinaltatok you pl did something or I have something done beszeltek can also have two interpretations only indefinite forms involved again in writing because the letter e represents two different vowels ɛ IPA Number 303 and ae IPA Number 325 you pl speak beszel tek you pl they spoke beszel t past ek they The syllable tek always contains a closed ɛ in the meaning you pl present and always contains an open ae in the meaning third person plural past in speech This homonymy only exists in writing if the speaker is sophisticated This latter case is not possible with back vowel verbs due to the difference of the linking vowel csinaltok you pl do something vs csinaltak they did something If the affix contains the back vowel o then it is the counterpart of the front vowel e which always a closed ɛ If the affix contains the back vowel a then it is the counterpart of the front vowel e which always an open ae Below is a chart to review the conjugation differences between coinciding forms of the same verb again Ambiguous forms in different persons are marked with asterisks I speak etc present indef I spoke etc past indef I make somebody speak etc present indef I do etc present indef I did etc past indef I have something done etc present indef beszelekbeszelszbeszelbeszelunkbeszeltek beszelnek beszeltembeszeltelbeszeltbeszeltunkbeszeltetek beszeltek beszeltetek beszeltetszbeszeltetbeszeltetunkbeszeltettekbeszeltetnek csinalokcsinalszcsinalcsinalunkcsinaltokcsinalnak csinaltamcsinaltalcsinaltcsinaltunkcsinaltatok csinaltak csinaltatok csinaltatszcsinaltatcsinaltatunkcsinaltattokcsinaltatnak Sporadic coincidences edit Front vowel verbs in type III that end in t may cause ambiguity like between the past tense of a verb and the present tense of another For example Homonymous verb Meaning 1 Meaning 2 Feltem I was afraid fel be afraid tem past tense type I first person indef I fear for him her it felt fear for somebody something em present tense first person def Nem ert hozza S he didn t touch it hozza er touch t past tense type I indef S he isn t familiar with it ert hozza be familiar with something present tense indef Koszont S he said hello koszon say hello t past tense type I indef S he welcomes you koszont welcome present tense indef Megbant valamit S he regretted something megban regret t past tense type I indef S he offends something megbant offend present tense indef Below is a chart to review the conjugation differences between coinciding forms of unrelated verbs Ambiguous forms in the same person are marked in bold ambiguous forms in different persons are marked with asterisks I was afraid etc past indef I fear for somebody etc present indef I fear for him her it etc present def I am not familiar with it etc present indef I didn t touch it etc past indef feltemfeltelfeltfeltunkfeltetekfeltek feltek felteszfeltfeltunkfeltetekfeltenek feltemfeltedfeltifeltjukfeltitekfeltik nem ertek hozza nem ertesz hozzanem ert hozzanem ertunk hozzanem ertetek hozzanem ertenek hozza nem ertem hozzanem ertel hozzanem ert hozzanem ertunk hozzanem ertetek hozzanem ertek hozza The correct pronunciation of feltem I was afraid is feltaem The correct pronunciation of feltem I fear for him her it is feltɛm The correct pronunciation of feltetek you were afraid is feltaetɛk The correct pronunciation of feltetek you fear for somebody is feltɛtɛk The correct pronunciation of feltek They were afraid is feltaek The correct pronunciation of feltek I fear for somebody is feltɛk These homonyms only exist in writing if the speaker is sophisticated Moods editHungarian verbs have 3 moods indicative conditional and subjunctive imperative The indicative has a past and non past tense The conditional has a non past tense and a past form made up of the past tense indicative as the finite verb with the non finite verb volna The subjunctive only has a single tense Conditional edit Use of the conditional In a sentence with if unlike in English the appropriate conditional tense is used in both the if clause and the main clause The present conditional is used to talk about unlikely or impossible events in the present or future e g Ha talalkoznal a kiralynovel mit mondanal If you met lit would meet the Queen what would you say The past conditional is used for past events which did not happen e g Ha nem talalkoztunk volna a kiralynovel orakkal ezelott megerkeztunk volna If we hadn t lit wouldn t have met the Queen we would have arrived hours ago cf the English counterfactual conditional Forms of the conditional edit Person Indefinite Definite 1st Sg kernek varnek kernem varnam 2nd Sg kernel varnal kerned varnad 3rd Sg kerne varna kerne varna 1st Pl kernenk varnank kernenk varnank 2nd Pl kernetek varnatok kernetek varnatok 3rd Pl kernenek varnanak kernek varnak The front vowel suffix at the end of the 1st person singular indefinite form of the back vowel verb varnek is an apparent exception from the vowel harmony it may serve to distinguish from the 3rd person plural definite form varnak The indefinite kernek forms still coincide just like the 1st and 2nd person plural endings The only opposition between the 3rd person singular definite and indefinite forms is vowel length although a a and e e differ in quality as well which can be considered one of the rare fusional traits in Hungarian A linking vowel is inserted into verbs with a consonant cluster or long vowel t at the end e g festenek I would paint tanitanek I would teach analogously to the rules given for the infinitive form Subjunctive imperative edit Uses of the subjunctive For a command i e an imperative For a request For hesitant questions with 1st singular subject cf English Shall I For suggestions for joint action with 1st plural subject cf English Let s For wishes 3rd person singular and plural In subordinate clauses after verbs expressing orders requests suggestions wishes permission etc In hogy subordinate clauses expressing purpose Forms of the subjunctive edit In the subjunctive or imperative mood verbs with a sibilant or t ending differ from the rest with two groups for the t ending those with a preceding short vowel and those with a preceding long vowel or a consonant Meanings of the verbs below ker ask have a request var wait keres look for olvas read fest paint szeret love fut run ment save tanit teach bongeszik browse maszik climb ereszt let go akaszt hang nez look at huz pull edz train lopodzik sneak INDEFINITE CONJUGATION Stem Forms ker var keres olvas szeret fut ment tanit bongeszik maszik ereszt akaszt nez huz edz lopodzik Original Stem all but the following S short vowel T other T SZ SZT Z DZ Altered Stem above J SS TS SSZ ZZ DDZ 1st Sg kerjek varjak keressek olvassak szeressek fussak mentsek tanitsak bongesszek masszak eresszek akasszak nezzek huzzak eddzek lopoddzak 2nd Sg kerj el varj al keress el olvass al szeress el fuss al ments el tanits al bongessz el massz al eressz el akassz al nezz el huzz al eddz el lopoddz al 3rd Sg kerjen varjon keressen olvasson szeressen fusson mentsen tanitson bongesszen masszon eresszen akasszon nezzen huzzon eddzen lopoddzon 1st Pl kerjunk varjunk keressunk olvassunk szeressunk fussunk mentsunk tanitsunk bongesszunk masszunk eresszunk akasszunk nezzunk huzzunk eddzunk lopoddzunk 2nd Pl kerjetek varjatok keressetek olvassatok szeressetek fussatok mentsetek tanitsatok bongesszetek masszatok eresszetek akasszatok nezzetek huzzatok eddzetek lopoddzatok 3rd Pl kerjenek varjanak keressenek olvassanak szeressenek fussanak mentsenek tanitsanak bongesszenek masszanak eresszenek akasszanak nezzenek huzzanak eddzenek lopoddzanak DEFINITE CONJUGATION Stem Forms ker var keres olvas szeret fut ment tanit bongeszik maszik ereszt akaszt nez huz edz lopodzik Original Stem all but the following S short vowel T other T SZ SZT Z DZ Altered Stem above J SS TS SSZ ZZ DDZ 1st Sg kerjem varjam keressem olvassam szeressem fussam mentsem tanitsam bongesszem masszam eresszem akasszam nezzem huzzam eddzem lopoddzam 2nd Sg ker je d var ja d keres se d olvas sa d szeres se d fus sa d ments e d tanits a d bongeszd bongesszed maszd masszad ereszd eresszed akaszd akasszad nez ze d huz za d edzd eddzed lopodzd lopoddzad 3rd Sg kerje varja keresse olvassa szeresse fussa mentse tanitsa bongessze massza eressze akassza nezze huzza eddze lopoddza 1st Pl kerjuk varjuk keressuk olvassuk szeressuk fussuk mentsuk tanitsuk bongesszuk masszuk eresszuk akasszuk nezzuk huzzuk eddzuk lopoddzuk 2nd Pl kerjetek varjatok keressetek olvassatok szeressetek fussatok mentsetek tanitsatok bongesszetek masszatok eresszetek akasszatok nezzetek huzzatok eddzetek lopoddzatok 3rd Pl kerjek varjak keressek olvassak szeressek fussak mentsek tanitsak bongesszek masszak eresszek akasszak nezzek huzzak eddzek lopoddzak 1st gt 2nd kerjelek varjalak keresselek olvassalak szeresselek fussalak mentselek tanitsalak bongesszelek masszalak eresszelek akasszalak nezzelek huzzalak eddzelek lopoddzalak Note 1 Fest paint is the only single example according to the Reverse alphabetical dictionary of the Hungarian Language that ends in st and there is no ik verb with these two ending consonants This verb is conjugated like the szeret fut type fessek fess el fessen fessunk fessetek fessenek fessem fes se d fesse fessuk fessetek fessek fesselek Note 2 the definite conjugation may be ungrammatical for verbs that cannot have an object e g fut run lopodzik sneak However these forms may occur in constructions like vegigfutja a tavot run all through the distance or perhaps even vegiglopoddza az epuleteket sneak through the buildings This solution doesn t work though for the forms affecting the 2nd person unless in a poetic vocative sense that is why they are marked with an asterisk Forms marked with a preceding equality sign are identical with the indicative forms Second person forms have a short and a long variant both in indefinite and definite conjugation with minimal difference in style Definite and indefinite conjugations editIn Hungarian verbs not only show agreement with their subjects but also carry information on the definiteness of their direct objects This results in two types of conjugations definite used if there is a definite object and indefinite if there is no definite object Verb with suffix forpresent tense 1st person singular Object Intransitive verb Olvasok I m reading type 1 suffix indicating no definite object Transitive verb with an indefinite object egy konyvet a book with a definite object Olvasom I m reading it type 2 suffix indicating definite object a konyvet the book Basically the indefinite conjugation is used if there is no definite object that is i if there is no object at all or ii if the object is indefinite see details below However exceptionally the indefinite conjugation is also used if the object is a 1st or 2nd person pronoun either stated or not even though the reference of personal pronouns is definite by nature An object is indefinite if it is a noun with no determiner a noun with an indefinite article a noun with a numeral or an indefinite determiner e g any some every but not all the an indefinite pronoun such as something anything everyone etc an interrogative pronoun except which a first or second person pronoun whether stated or unstated a relative pronoun The definite conjugation is used if the verb has a definite object which can be a proper noun some types with zero article other types preceded by a definite article a noun with a definite article a noun with the determiners melyik hanyadik which mindegyik each or az osszes all the noun may be omitted in these constructions a 3rd person pronoun either stated or unstated the reflexive pronoun a form of maga self a demonstrative pronoun this that the indefinite pronoun mind all of something including mindket both or a noun phrase determined by it a subordinate clause like the fact that or if whether A special suffix lak lek is used if the verb has a first person singular subject AND a second person singular or plural object in the informal conjugation e g Szeretlek I love you singular Szeretlek titeket I love you all plural Examples Indefinite latsz Definite latod You can see You can see something You can see a book You can see me us You can see some two You can t see anything anyone You can see everything everyone Who What How many can you see The person book that which you can see is You can see the book You can see this book You can see him her it them You can see yourself You can see Mary You can see both books You can see all the books Which person book can you see You can see that I m here No explicit object edit If no explicit object is present the most common interpretation of the definite verb forms is including him her it If an indefinite verb form semantically requires an object me or you sg or obviously an indefinite object third person can be inferred something The plural forms are generally made explicit This difference makes it possible for the writer or speaker to refer to people without making them explicit In most cases it is enough through the context to differentiate between 3rd person and non 3rd person pronouns Definite examples olvassa s he is reading most common meaning s he is reading it the book etc nezi s he is looking most common meaning s he is looking at him her it Indefinite examples fut s he is running usually can t have an object so its meaning is unambiguous olvas s he is reading most common meaning s he is reading something the object may be omitted like in English nez s he is looking most common meaning s he is looking at me or you or gazing in the air Grammatical voice editHungarian uses active forms not only in the active sense e g He opened the door and in the middle voice sense e g The door opened but also to express the passive e g The door was opened by Jane with the third person plural active form For example Megvizsgaljak a gyereket literally means They examine the child but it is more commonly meant like The child is examined The fact that this sentence behaves like a passive voice is shown by the fact that the above third person plural form can be used even when only one agent is meant i e the child is examined by one doctor Another means to express the passive meaning is using middle voice lexical forms or unaccusative verbs e g epul build intransitive cf epit build transitive alakul form intransitive cf alakit form transitive ul ul is a common ending that expresses the middle voice as opposed to it which expresses the active these are transitive verbs Middle voice forms can also be created from some plain verbs by adding odik odik e g irodik get written from ir write utodik get hit from ut hit These active middle pairs comprise a considerable part among Hungarian verbs In the perfect there is a third way to express passive meaning the existential verb van see van to be plus the adverbial participle ending in va ve see Adverb derivation e g meg van irva it is written from megir write It is used when the result of the action is emphasized It can be formed in the past perfect and future perfect too with the past and future forms of van A similar structure is used in a past meaning with lett meg lett irva it was written or it has been written sometimes it had been written Finally the actual passive form does occur once in a while formed with atik etik or tatik tetik For example szuletik be born from szul give birth adatik be given from ad give viseltetik owe somebody certain feelings from visel bear foglaltatik be included from magaba foglal include These can be formed by adding ik to the causative see Modal and causative suffixes Most of these forms except for szuletik are considered obsolete An example of a regular verb editHere is a regular verb ker ask have a request The personal suffixes are marked in bold ker ask Indefinite Definite Indicative Mood Present kerek kersz ker kerunk kertek kernek kerem kered keri kerjuk keritek kerik Past kertem kertel kert kertunk kertetek kertek kertem kerted kerte kertuk kertetek kertek Conditional Mood Present kernek kernel kerne kernenk kernetek kernenek kernem kerned kerne kernenk kernetek kernek Past kertemvolna kertelvolna kertvolna kertunkvolna kertetekvolna kertekvolna kertemvolna kertedvolna kertevolna kertukvolna kertetekvolna kertekvolna Subjunctive Mood Present kerjek kerjelor kerj kerjen kerjunk kerjetek kerjenek kerjem kerjedor kerd kerje kerjuk kerjetek kerjekModal and causative suffixes editHungarian has 2 forms which can be added to the verb stem to modify the meaning These are sometimes referred to as infixes but they are not true infixes because they are not inserted inside another morpheme hat het has a modal meaning of permission or opportunity e g beszelek I speak beszelhetek I may speak or I am allowed to speak Note Ability I can speak is usually expressed with tud See Auxiliary verbs modal and temporal at et and tat tet have a causative meaning It can express having something done or having making someone do something For example beszelek I speak beszeltetek I make somebody speak Incidentally it is the same form as you pl spoke analysed beszel t etek see Past tense tat tet is used if the word ends in vowel t or if the stem ends in a consonant different from t but it has two or more syllables excluding the verbal particle In other cases at et is used that is with words ending in a consonant t and with one syllable words ending in a consonant different from t Ending t not t vowel t consonant t One syllable suttet to have something baked lattat to make something seen gyujtet to have something collected festet to have something painted irat to have something written mosat to have something washed furdet to give somebody a bath Also ki dobat to have somebody thrown out el fogat to have somebody caught See the exceptions below Several syllables tanittat to have somebody taught felszolittat to have somebody warned felebresztet to have somebody woken up halasztat to have something postponed beszeltet to have somebody speak dolgoztat to make somebody work olvastat to have somebody read The monosyllabic words which don t end in vowel t but have tat tet in the causative are az ik aztat buk ik buktat kop ik koptat el eltet kel keltet lep leptet szun ik szuntet szok ik szoktet Some monosyllabic words not ending in vowel t have both at et and tat tet as causative forms with differences in meaning For example szop ik szopat to make someone suck on something szoptat to allow someone to suck on something e g during breastfeeding hany 5 6 hanyat to make someone throw something e g firewood into a heap hanytat to help someone vomit jar 7 8 jarat to ensure someone e g a child goes somewhere e g to school regularly to start and operate e g a machine jartat to lead someone or something e g an animal while walking Verbal noun editA noun is formed from a verb by adding as es to the verb stem cf gerund in English e g Az uszas egeszseges Swimming is healthy Participles editThere are three participles in Hungarian They are formed by adding the following suffixes to the verb stem o o present participle e g iro ember a writing person ott ett ott t past participle e g megirt level a written letter the letter that has been written ando endo future participle e g irando level a letter to be written Since the past participle usually expresses a perfected action event the verb sometimes changes into its perfective counterpart by taking a verbal particle igekoto with this function as seen in the above example megirt level This verbal particle may however be replaced by a noun e g Annanak irt level a letter written to Anna See more under Hungarian syntax Verb particles prefixes igekotok editHungarian verbs can have verb particles or prefixes similar to phrasal verbs in English The most common ones are meg perfective but some other ones too can take this function fel up le down off be in ki out el away vissza back at over through oda there ide here ossze together szet apart ra on top The above meanings are the literal meanings but they all can have figurative idiomatic meanings Examples of literal meanings for the verb ir write leir write down beir write into as opposed to the non literal meanings leir declare as useless cf write off beir give a written warning to a schoolchild Different prefixes can express subtle differences e g meghizik get fat vs elhizik get obese literally fatten away as well as independent concepts e g rug kick kirug fire somebody berug get drunk They often serve to change the verb into perfective along with other factors When the particle precedes the verb without any other inserted word they are used as one word e g Leirja He writes it down Syntactically the particle may go behind the verb for various reasons It may occur due to a stressed part in the sentence the focus e g O irja le It s him who writes it down or a negation e g Nem irja le He doesn t write it down The inverted order is also used in the imperative e g Irja le Write it down Finally it may also refer to continuity like Lement a lepcson He went down the stairs vs Ment le a lepcson He was going down the stairs If the verb with the particle is in the infinitive the finite verb will be wedged between them e g Le akarja irni He wants to write it down or Le tudja irni He can write it down The particle may considerably affect the case of the complement for example the verb kezd start something can take several different verb particles all expressing the same concept with minor differences but their complement differs depending on the particle elkezd valamit accusative nekikezd valaminek dative belekezd valamibe illative hozzakezd valamihez allative It happens because certain verb particles the latter three among the examples come from personal pronouns in the given case and they require agreement When giving a short positive answer to a yes no question the particle can refer back to the whole sentence see Yes no questions In literary style articles can be reduplicated to indicate a gradual or stuttering action ki kijott a mὁkus the squirrel crept out Cases needing attention edit There are a few words which appear to begin with a particle but don t actually e g felel reply lehel breathe puff kialt give a shout and beszel speak where fel le ki and be are parts of the words themselves rather than actual particles The difference is important in the above mentioned syntactic cases when these elements will naturally not function like particles do Compare the above kialt no compound with ki all stand out a compound nem kialt he doesn t give a shout but nem all ki he doesn t stand out A similar case is fellebbez appeal in court from the adverb fellebb upper today feljebb containing no particle A verb may occasionally be a homonym in the above sense i e being a single word or containing a particle e g betuz spell by letters no compound but be tuz stick in or shine in a compound The other misleading cases are those verbs which were historically formed from nouns derived from verbs with particles so they seemingly begin with particles but they don t behave like them An example is befolyasol influence v which derives from befolyas influence n a calque from German Einfluss literally in flow including the particle be in This element being part of the original noun will not act as a particle of the derived verb befolyasol There are few such words e g kivitelez implement from kivitel implementation execution cf carrying out Kirandul go hiking used to be a compound ki randul but people don t usually treat it like that anymore so they say e g Kirandulni akar s he wants to go hiking instead of Ki akar randulni which is obsolete and only used jokingly A common error among native speakers is the case of feltetelez suppose or assume which comes from feltetel condition so the prefix is only part of the embedded noun rather than of the full verb but it is still often separated fel sem tetelezhetjuk fel kell teteleznunk we can t even assume we must suppose instead of the correct forms nem is feltetelezhetjuk felteteleznunk kell What functions as a verbal prefix sometimes may not be one other times e g ellenall resist can separate like nem allok ellen I don t resist but ellenoriz check stays together like nem ellenorzok I don t check because the latter is derived from the noun ellenor inspector Auxiliary verbs modal and temporal editMost Hungarian auxiliary verbs are impersonal beside them the suffixed infinitive is used A few are conjugated Note personal suffixes are marked in bold Auxiliary verb Meaning Form Example with meaning kell obligation impersonal kell mennem I must have to go kellene kene advice amp suggestions impersonal kellene mennemkene mennem I should ought to go muszaj strong obligation impersonal muszaj mennem I have got to go szabad permission impersonal szabad mennem I am allowed to go tilos prohibition impersonal tilos mennem I must not go fog future intention conjugated fogok menni I am going to go tud ability conjugated tudok menni I can go Modal suffix hat het opportunity permission conjugated mehetek I can goI may go The suffix hat het mentioned in the last row can be further conjugated just like any verb The verb lehet is used impersonally e g oda lehet menni one can go there The verb szokik editThe verb szokik is conjugated like a regular past tense one though it can have the indefinite and the definite forms too however used with an infinitive it has the meaning of a habitual action which includes the present time Examples Szoktam almodni I dream usually Meg szoktam mosni I usually wash it Irregular verbs editThe verbs van to be jon to come and megy to go have an irregular present tense and irregular stems for different tenses jon also has irregular forms in the subjunctive A further group of 9 verbs have irregular stems for different tenses but follow the same pattern of irregularity as each other A few other verbs shorten or drop a vowel with certain suffixes A regular verb compared to an irregular Regular verb el to live Irregular verb megy to go Past Present Past Present eltem elek mentem megyek eltel elsz mentel mesz sometimes also megy elt el ment megy eltunk elunk mentunk megyunk eltetek eltek mentetek mentek eltek elnek mentek mennekvan to be editThe verb to be in Hungarian is van 3rd person lenni infinitive Use edit When the verb is used as a copula i e if one speaks about what someone or something is it is omitted in the third person singular and plural of the present tense The verb is required in all other tenses and persons when speaking about where or how something is or to emphasize the existence or availability of something Examples Peter orvos Peter is a doctor present tense third person speaking about what someone is no linking verb in Hungarian Peter jol van Peter is well Peter itt van Peter is here Peter orvos volt Peter was a doctor Orvos vagyok I am a doctor The non copula form of van is also used to express the equivalent of There is are Van orvos a szobaban There is a doctor in the room The negation of the third person van plural vannak as a non copula verb is the suppletive nincs plural nincsenek Itt van Peter Peter is here Nincs itt Peter Peter isn t here Hungarian has no verb which is equivalent to to have Instead ownership possession are expressed using van with a possessive suffix on the noun Van konyvem I have a book literally There is book my Conjugation edit Like the verb to be in many other languages van is irregular It comes from three or four bases vagy or van vol and len These overlap to some extent with the verb lesz become As it cannot have an object it does not have definite forms It is the only verb in Hungarian which has a future form Indicative Mood Present Tense vagyok vagy van vagyunk vagytok vannak Past Tense voltam voltal volt voltunk voltatok voltak Future Tense leszek leszel lesz leszunk lesztek lesznek Conditional Mood Present Tense lennekor volnek lennelor volnal lenneor volna lennenkor volnank lennetekor volnatok lennenekor volnanak Past Tense lettemvolna lettelvolna lettvolna lettunkvolna lettetekvolna lettekvolna Subjunctive Mood Present Tense legyek legyelor legy legyen legyunk legyetek legyenek There is little difference between the two conditional forms In theory lennek etc are preferred when an option is considered as possible e g Ha otthon lennek if I were at home and volnek etc are preferred when it is considered impossible e g Ha rozsa volnek if I were a rose but the limits are rather vague It is probably not by chance that the former is akin to the future form leszek which might still become true and the latter to the past form voltam which is already determined In practice the lennek series is somewhat more frequently used in both senses External links edit nbsp For a list of words relating to Hungarian verbs see the Hungarian verbs category of words in Wiktionary the free dictionary Verbs selected from Ragozgato Archived 2010 07 21 at the Wayback Machine Verbs are mostly selected from Ragozgato Archived 2010 07 21 at the Wayback Machine Hol a rosszasag mostanaban Archived from the original on 2012 02 20 Retrieved 2013 09 12 Konyorgom konyorgok Archived from the original on 2013 06 02 Retrieved 2013 09 12 hany Magyar etimologiai szotar Kezikonyvtar www arcanum com in Hungarian Arcanum Retrieved 26 June 2023 hany ige szarmazekszavai e nyelv hu in Hungarian Magyar Nyelvi Szolgaltato Iroda Retrieved 26 June 2023 jarat A magyar nyelv ertelmezo szotara www arcanum com in Hungarian Arcanum Retrieved 26 June 2023 jartat A magyar nyelv ertelmezo szotara Kezikonyvtar www arcanum com in Hungarian Arcanum Retrieved 26 June 2023 Hungarian verb conjugator with opportunity for testing and practising Online morphology charts at the website of the Research Institute for Linguistics of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences Hungarian verb conjugator Jargot com s verb conjugator Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hungarian verbs amp oldid 1215906132, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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