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Hungarian alphabet

 
Wikipedia: Hungarian alphabet
Hungarian language
Closeup of Hungarian keyboard
Alphabet, including ő ű and
cs dz dzs gy ly ny sz ty zs
Phonetics and phonology
Vowel harmony
Grammar
(Noun phrases · Verbs ·
T-V distinction)
Orthography
Regulatory body
Hungarian names
Language history
(Sound correspondences)
Tongue-twisters

Hungarian pronunciation of English
Old Hungarian script
English words from Hungarian

The Hungarian alphabet is an extension of the Latin alphabet.

One sometimes speaks of the smaller and greater Hungarian alphabet, depending on whether the letters Q, W, X, Y which can only be found in foreign words and traditional orthography of names are listed, or not. The 44 letters of the (greater) Hungarian alphabet are:

A Á B C Cs D Dz Dzs E É F
G Gy H I Í J K L Ly M N
Ny O Ó Ö Ő P (Q) R S Sz T
Ty U Ú Ü Ű V (W) (X) (Y) Z Zs

Contents

Description

Each sign shown above counts as a letter in its own right in Hungarian. Some, such as the letter ó and ő, are interfiled with the letter preceding it; whereas others, such as ö have their own place in collation rather than also being interfiled with o.

While long vowels count as different letters, long (or geminate) consonants don't. Long consonants are marked by duplication: e.g. <tt>, <gg>, <zz> (ette 'he ate (det.obj.)', függ 'it hangs', azzal 'with that'). For the di- and tri-graphs a simplification rule normally applies (but not when the compound is split at the end of a line of text due to hyphenation): only the first letter is duplicated: e.g. <sz>+<sz>→<ssz> (asszony 'woman'), <ty>+<ty>→<tty> (hattyú 'swan'), <dzs>+<dzs>→<ddzs> (briddzsel 'with bridge (card game)').
An exception is made at the joining points of compound words, for example: jegygyűrű 'engagement ring' (jegy + gyűrű) not *jeggyűrű.

Pronunciation

Hungarian orthography's principles include being phonetic along with being traditional, etymological and simplifying. Therefore most words can be read out correctly, if one knows the pronunciation of the letters.

The pronunciation of Hungarian letters which follows is that of standard Hungarian.

(You might want to increase your browser's display font size to see the IPA symbols more correctly).

Letter Name Phoneme (IPA) Complementary allophones (IPA)[1] Approx. English pronunciation Notes
A a /ɒ/Open back rounded vowel.ogg bod [ɑ̝̹] might describe it better (raised, more rounded; sign rendered probably incorrectly, containing two diacritical marks below). Still definitely not [ɔ]
Á á /aː/Open front unrounded vowel.ogg as the first sound of 'i' in file, line; how
B /b/voiced bilabial plosive.ogg as by, absence etc.
C /ts/Voiceless alveolar affricate.ogg like tsunami
Cs csé /tʃ/ as check,cheek, etching etc.
D /d/Voiced alveolar plosive.ogg deck, wide etc.
Dz dzé /dz/voiced alveolar affricate.ogg like in Hudson does not occur at the beginning of words. When neither post- nor preconsonantic, always realised as a geminate.
Dzs dzsé /dʒ/ jam, george, bridge, edge, fridge when final or intervocalic, usually realised as a geminate: maharadzsa /mɑhɑrɑdʒɑ/ [mɑhɑrɑd͡ʒːɑ] 'maharajah', bridzs /bridʒ/ [brid͡ʒː] 'bridge (card game)', but dzsungel /dʒuŋɡɛl/ [d͡ʒuŋɡɛl] 'jungle', fridzsider /fridʒidɛr/ [frid͡ʒidɛr] coll. 'refrigerator'
E e /ɛ/Open-mid front unrounded vowel.ogg like less, cheque, edge, bed about 40-50% of speakers also have a phoneme /e/ (see below at Ë). /e/ is not considered part of standard Hungarian, wherein /ɛ/ or /æ/ takes the place of /e/.
(Ë) ë /e/ like in "same", without the /ɪ/ part of the diphthong /eɪ/ Although not part of the alphabet, this symbol is sometimes used to denote the phoneme /e/, e.g. when noting down texts spoken or sung in a dialect where this sound is present.
É é /eː/Close-mid front unrounded vowel.ogg café, hey
F ef /f/voiceless labiodental fricative.ogg find, euphoria
G /ɡ/Voiced velar plosive.ogg get, leg, go etc.
Gy gyé /ɟ/Voiced palatal plosive.ogg (not used in English) similar to: duke, dew, due (British, not American, pronunciation) denoting /ɟ/ by <gy> is a remnant of (probably) Italian scribes who tried to render the Hungarian sound. <dy> would be a more consistent notation in scope of <ty>, <ny>, <ly> (see there), as the <y> part of digraphs show palatalisation in the Hungarian writing system.
H /h/ 1. [ɦ]Voiced glottal fricative.ogg

2.
3. [x]voiceless velar fricative.ogg
4. [ç]voiceless palatal fricative.ogg

Basic: hi
1. behind
2. <mute>
3. loch, Chanukah
4. human
1. when in intervocalic position.
2. not rendered usually when in final position méh /meː/ 'bee', cseh /tʃɛ/ 'Czech (noun/adj.)'
3. seldom in final position, such as in doh 'dampness', MÉH 'metal recycling facility'
4. seldom, such as in ihlet 'inspiration'
I i /i/ thick, thin Pronounced the same as Í, only shorter
Í í /iː/Close front unrounded vowel.ogg lead, leave, seed, sea Vowel length is phonemically distinctive in Hungarian: irt 'he eradicates' ∼ írt 'he wrote'
J /j/Palatal approximant.ogg [ç], [ʝ] you, yes, faith allophones occur when /j/ occurs after a consonant; (voiceless after voiceless, voiced after voiced consonants). e.g. férj 'husband', kapj 'get! (imperative)'
K /k/Voiceless velar plosive.ogg key, kiss, weak
L el /l/alveolar lateral approximant.ogg leave, list
Ly ely, el ipszilon /j/Palatal approximant.ogg hey, ray Orthographic tradition. Once /ʎ/, now /j/ in standard Hungarian.
M em /m/bilabial nasal.ogg mind, assume, might,
N en /n/ [ŋ]velar nasal.ogg

[n]alveolar nasal.ogg

thing, lying (before k,g),
need, bone (anywhere else)
allophone before /k/, /ɡ/
Ny eny /ɲ/palatal nasal.ogg new (in BE, not AE)
O o /o/ force, sorcerer A shorter, more open variant of Ó
Ó ó /oː/Close-mid back rounded vowel.ogg go, sew, snow minimal pair to /o/: kor 'age' ∼ kór 'disease'
Ö ö /ø/ (Not used in English; corresponds to German Ö A shorter, more open variant of Ő)
Ő ő /øː/ Not used in English; a longer, more closed variant of Ö Minimal pair to /ø/: öt 'five' ∼ őt 'him/her (Hungarian pronouns do not specify gender)'
P /p/Voiceless bilabial plosive.ogg peas, apricot, hope
(Q) Q occurs only as part of the digraph qu in foreign words, realised as /kv/: Aquincum [ɑkviŋkum] (name of an old Roman settlement on the area of present-day Óbuda). Words originally spelled with qu are today usually spelled with kv, as in akvarell 'watercolor painting'.
R er /r/alveolar trill.ogg (not used in BE, pronounced like Spanish R or like the t and tt in AE water and butter) also called apical trill as pronounced by trilling the tip of your tongue (the apex) and not the uvula.
S es /ʃ/voiceless postalveolar fricative.ogg share, wish, shout This notation is unusual for European writing systems where <s> stands for /s/ virtually everywhere. In Hungarian, /s/ is represented by <sz>.
Sz esz /s/Voiceless alveolar fricative.ogg say, estimate
T /t/voiceless alveolar plosive.ogg tell, least, feast
Ty tyé /c/Voiceless palatal plosive.ogg (not used in English) similar to: stew, stuart (BE RP)
U u /u/ nuke, duke
Ú ú /uː/Close back rounded vowel.ogg do, fool minimal pair to /u/: hurok 'loop' ∼ húrok 'cords'
Ü ü /y/ (not used in English, corresponds to German Ü) A shorter, more open variant of ű
Ű ű /yː/Close front rounded vowel.ogg (not used in English)
V /v/voiced labiodental fricative.ogg very, every
(W) dupla vé /v/voiced labiodental fricative.ogg view, evolve, vacuum note the difference between its English name (which is double U) and the Hungarian one (which is double V). This explains its rendition as /v/. It occurs only in foreign words and in Hungarian aristocratic surnames
(X) iksz occurs only in loanwords, and there only when denoting /ks/; [ɡz] is transcribed: extra, Alexandra, but egzakt 'exact'.
(Y) ipszilon /i/ in loanwords, usually rendered as /i/ or /j/. Occurs very often in old Hungarian aristocratic surnames where it stands for /i/ or /ʲi/: 'Báthory' [baːtori], 'Batthyány' [bɑcːaːɲi] or [bɑcːaːni] (<n>+<y> ∼ /n/+/ʲi//nʲi//ɲi/)
Z /z/Voiced alveolar fricative.ogg desert, roses
Zs zsé /ʒ/voiced postalveolar fricative.ogg pleasure, leisure, genre
  1. ^ List of complementary allophone variants possibly not complete.

Capitalisation

The di- and the trigraphs are capitalised in names and at the beginning of sentences by capitalising the first glyph of them only.

  • Csak jót mondhatunk Székely Csabáról.

In abbreviations and when writing with all capital letters, however, one capitalises the second (and third) character as well.

Thus ("The Rules of Hungarian Orthography", a book edited by the Hungarian Academy of Sciences):

  • A magyar helyesírás szabályai
  • MHSZ (not *MHSz)
  • A MAGYAR HELYESÍRÁS SZABÁLYAI (not *SzABÁLyAI)

Alphabetical ordering (collation)

While the characters with diacritical marks are considered separate letters, vowels that differ only in length are treated the same when ordering words. Therefore, for example, O and Ó are not distinguished in ordering, neither are Ö and Ő, but the latter two follow the O's.

The polygraphic consonant signs are treated as single letters.

comb
cukor
csak <cs> comes after <c>
...
folyik
folyó <ó> is sorted as <o>
folyosó
...
and <ő> is sorted as <ö>,
födém but <ö> comes after <o>
...

The simplified geminates of multigraphs (see above) such as <nny>, <ssz> are collated as <ny>+<ny>, <sz>+<sz> etc., if they are double geminates, rather than co-occurrences of a single letter and a geminate.

könnyű is collated as <k><ö><ny><ny><ű>. tizennyolc of course as <t><i><z><e><n><ny><o><l><c>, as this is a compound: tizen+nyolc ('above ten' + 'eight' = 'eighteen').

Similar 'ambiguities', which can occur with compounds (which are highly common in Hungarian) are dissolved and collated by sense.

e.g. házszám 'house number (address)' = ház + szám and of course not *házs + *zám.

These rules make Hungarian alphabetic ordering algorithmically difficult (one has to know the correct segmentation of a word to sort it correctly), a problem for computer software development.

Keyboard layout

The Hungarian keyboard layout is German-based (QWERTZ). This layout allows direct access to every character in the Hungarian alphabet.

Hungarian keyboard layout


Letter frequencies

The most common letters in Hungarian are e and a[1]. The list below shows the letter frequencies for more letters in order of descending frequency.

Letter Frequency
e 12.256%
a 9.428%
t 7.380%
n 6.445%
l 6.383%
s 5.322%
k 4.522%
é 4.511%
i 4.200%
m 4.054%
o 3.867%
á 3.649%
g 2.838%
r 2.807%
z 2.734%
v 2.453%
b 2.058%
d 2.037%
sz 1.809%
j 1.570%
h 1.341%
gy 1.185%
ő 0.884%
ö 0.821%
ny 0.790%
ly 0.738%
ü 0.655%
ó 0.634%
f 0.582%
p 0.509%
í 0.499%
u 0.416%
cs 0.260%
ű 0.125%
c 0.114%
ú 0.104%
zs 0.021%

See also

References

  1. ^ www.cryptogram.org/cdb/words/frequency.html - Letter frequencies. Retrieved 10 June 2008.

External links


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